Sugar baby
A sugar baby is a person in a romantic relationship who receives cash, gifts or other benefits in exchange for being in the relationship.[1] The practice is sometimes called "sugaring." The sugar baby's partner is referred to as the "sugar daddy" or "sugar momma" and is typically wealthier and older than the sugar baby.
This emerging trend has produced the highest number of sugar babies in the United States, followed by Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and Colombia.[2] In America, students are able to find men or women through online dating services with such names as "Sugardaddie", "SeekingArrangement", "SugarDaddyForMe", and "MutualArrangements".[3][4][5][6] The site SeekingArrangement claims to have over 1.4 million students among its members, comprising 42 percent of registrants. Almost one million of these are in the United States.[7]
According to one of the main websites that connects the two parties, 36% of what they receive goes to tuition payments, while 23% is used to pay rent. The rest is spent on books, transportation, clothes, and other items.[2]
Legal status
The online sites used for introducing people who may negotiate sugar arrangements are technically dating sites. Membership on one site in 2016 was $70 a month for sugar daddies, but free for sugar babies. What happens after the initial date, whether much or nothing, involving sex or not, is between the parties.[8]
See also
- Gold Digger
- Kept man, a similar arrangement with roles reversed
- Age disparity in sexual relationships
- Trophy wife
- Enjo kōsai
- Mistress (lover)
References
- ↑ 'Sugar Baby' Reveals Why Married Men Cheat With Her For Thousands Of Dollars (VIDEO)
- 1 2 Sugaring: A New Kind of Irresistible
- ↑ Confessions of a college sugar baby | Lifestyle from CTV News
- ↑ The Secret World of Sugar Babies
- ↑ Student shares experiences as a sugar baby: Not all gifts, glamour | UGAnews | redandblack.com
- ↑ UNM ranked No. 16 in top 20 Sugar Baby Schools | Albuquerque Journal
- ↑ Where the Sugar Babies Are – The Atlantic
- ↑ Elizabeth Hernandez (13 May 2016). "Colorado "sugar babies" use online dating to cover soaring tuition. There are more than 2,700 sugar daddies registered with Seeking Arrangement in the Denver area and 202 sugar mommies". The Denver Post. Retrieved 13 May 2016.
Local law enforcement agencies say that because the site was set up like a dating website and advertised as facilitating consensual connections, it is not illegal.