Every few months a new Escort directory rolls out with a slick homepage and a pitch that sounds more impressive than it turns out to be. Most of them quietly disappear inside a year. AllEscorts.com is the latest to try its luck, and I’ll tell you upfront: it’s better than the average newcomer. Not perfect, not finished, but better. That’s worth something in a space where the competition includes sites that look like they were designed in 2004 and haven’t been touched since.
AllEscorts.com calls itself a VIP Escort directory, and the site went live in 2026 under Avori Media Project. I spent real time on it — clicking through listing pages, pulling up individual profiles, testing the filters, and checking the actual content in each of the markets it claims to cover. This review is based on what I actually found, not on the marketing copy.
What AllEscorts Is and How It Works

The basic model is simple and genuinely user-friendly: you can browse the entire directory without creating an account, entering a credit card, or passing through any kind of paywall. That’s the correct approach for a directory, and a lot of sites still get it wrong. If you’re an escort looking to post, registration is also free, which helps explain why the site launched with real active listings instead of empty category pages.
The legal structure is standard for the category: Avori Media Project sells advertising space, the people posting are advertising independently, and the platform makes clear it is not running an escort service. The disclaimer is visible and the Terms and Conditions are actually there if you want to read them, which already puts AllEscorts ahead of a few directories I’ve reviewed where the legal page was either a copy-paste from another site or missing entirely — the kind of thing you’d only notice if you’ve seen enough of these sites to know what corners are usually cut.
There are premium listing tiers. You’ll spot badges labeled “Boosted” and “ELIT” on profiles. Visually they look like paid upgrades — better positioning in search, a highlighted card, some kind of status marker. The problem is that the advertise page where you’d expect to find the pricing and details for these tiers is currently returning a 404 error. So the tiers exist, the badges are showing up on profiles, but the documentation for what you’re buying isn’t accessible. That’s something that needs fixing before this directory can seriously market itself to escorts who want to invest in a paid tier.
Where Does AllEscorts Actually Have Coverage?
The homepage says “Find Escorts in Top Cities Worldwide.” The reality is more specific than that, and there’s nothing wrong with being specific as long as you’re honest about it. AllEscorts currently has five active markets: Turkey, the United Kingdom, Germany, Austria, and Italy. Within those five countries, coverage is legitimate. I counted 64 or more verified cities across the platform: Turkey leading with 20 or more cities, Germany with 20, the UK at 15, Austria with 5, and Italy with 4 or more.
That’s a solid European and Turkey-focused directory. There is no Asia, no Americas, no Middle East, no Scandinavia, and no North Africa. If you’re traveling to Bangkok, Buenos Aires, or Dubai, you’re not going to find what you need here. Whether that matters depends entirely on who you are and where you’re based. For anyone living in or traveling through Western Europe or Turkey, the coverage is real, the cities are populated, and the listings are current.
One quirk worth flagging: the German URL structure has an issue where /germany and /deutschland both return 404 errors. The actual German content is served at /de. Small thing, but if you’re trying to link a friend directly to the Germany section or you bookmark the wrong URL, you’ll hit a dead end. Hopefully that gets cleaned up in a site update.
The multilingual support (English, German, and Italian) lines up with the covered markets, which shows some actual planning. If German or Italian is your language, you get an interface in that language — not a halfhearted machine translation dropped on top of English-only bones. The site isn’t pretending to serve 50 countries and then running everything in English only.
Searching and Filtering: One of the Stronger Parts of the Site

I want to give credit here because the filter setup is genuinely useful. At the top level you get a Name search, a Country dropdown, and a City dropdown. Once you’re inside a country or city listing page, the sidebar opens up with a proper set of filters:
- Verified status toggle
- Age range (18-20, 21-25, 26-30, 31-40, 40+)
- Height and breast size
- Ethnicity
- Languages spoken
- Incall or outcall preference
- District within the city
That’s a practical filter set. You can narrow a 30-profile city page down to the four or five that actually match what you’re looking for without wasting time clicking through profiles that don’t fit. The city chips on the homepage let you jump directly to a location without going through the dropdown chain, which is a small convenience that adds up when you’re browsing quickly.
The listing cards show pricing before you click into a profile. That’s a design decision I respect a lot. You shouldn’t have to open four tabs and read through two paragraphs of bio copy to find out whether the rate is in your range. AllEscorts puts it right on the card. The “Online Now” indicator is also on the listing card, so you can see who’s actually available without opening individual profiles and checking one by one.
Profile Quality: This Is Where the “VIP” Label Gets Complicated
Here’s where I have real mixed feelings, and I want to be specific so you know exactly what you’re getting.
Take a profile like Lara, listed as ELIT in Istanbul’s Sisli district, age 21. She carries an “Escort Verified” badge and shows as “Available Now.” Inside the profile you get her age, languages, height, weight, hair color, eye color, and a tiered pricing table: 1 hour at USD 100, 2 hours at USD 400, overnight at USD 4,600, 36 hours at USD 6,600. There’s a list of more than 25 services and a date showing when the profile was added. Her phone number and WhatsApp are directly visible.
On paper, that’s a detailed profile. The problem: she has three photos. Three. That’s the photo count you’d expect on a free classifieds post, not on a listing that carries a VIP premium badge. And this isn’t unique to Lara — three photos is the limit across the verified profiles I checked. If the platform is going to position itself at the higher end of the market, the photo situation needs a serious rethink. If you’re the type who wants to see a real gallery before you pick up the phone — and most people are — three shots isn’t going to cut it.
The Empty Review System
Every profile I looked at had zero reviews. Not “this profile is new and hasn’t received reviews yet” — just nothing. The system appears to exist structurally, but no reviews are showing up anywhere.
If you’re the type who checks reviews before booking anything, the empty system is going to frustrate you fast. In a category where trust is the central friction point, a working review system is one of the most useful tools a directory can offer. Escorts with consistent reviews are easier to vet. Users who can leave reviews feel more invested in the platform. AllEscorts has the framework for this but it isn’t producing output yet, and a directory calling itself VIP with zero visible reviews across the board is a gap that’s hard to ignore.
Other Profile Issues Worth Mentioning
Nationality shows as “Prefer not to say” on a lot of profiles. That’s a privacy choice and I’m not going to argue with it, but it does make the listing feel thin. More noticeably, I found profiles with bio text in a different language than the profile’s listed location. A bio written in Turkish on an English-language profile for someone listed in London doesn’t inspire confidence. It suggests either an automated translation gap or profiles being copy-pasted across markets without proper editing.
The “ELIT” label is Turkey-specific and never explained on the site. Same with “Boosted” — you can tell it means something, but what exactly you’re getting and how an escort qualifies for the badge isn’t documented. The “Top Girl” spotlight on country pages is similarly opaque. If you’re going to run a tiered system, put the explanation somewhere users can find it.
Pricing: The Numbers Are All Over the Place

The price range on AllEscorts is one of the more striking things about browsing it. On the high end, Lara’s 36-hour rate of USD 6,600 is expensive but not shocking for a major city premium listing. On the low end, there’s a profile sitting on the homepage listing at USD 10 per hour. That’s not a formatting error. Ten dollars.
There’s no floor. No minimum rate, no moderation of obviously implausible pricing. If you see a USD 10 listing on a VIP directory homepage, you’re right to wonder who’s paying attention. That single entry does more damage to the “VIP” positioning than anything else on the site, because it signals that nobody is checking whether the listed prices make sense.
The currency situation adds to the confusion. You’ll see USD, EUR, and GBP mixed together on the same listing page without any normalization. UK escorts list in GBP, roughly 25 to 150 per hour depending on the profile. Turkish escorts post in USD, ranging from 10 at the suspicious low end to 250 on the higher tier. Austrian escorts generally list in EUR, typically 50 to 150. Those ranges are reasonable within each market. The problem is that when profiles from different markets appear together in a search result, you’re comparing USD 10 to GBP 150 to EUR 80 with no conversion help. A simple currency filter or normalization in search results would fix this.
Trust and Safety: Genuinely Better Than I Expected
I was prepared to find a bare-minimum safety setup on a brand-new directory. What I actually found was more thoughtful than that.
An age gate popup appears on every page visit, confirming you’re 18 or older. There’s a photo disclaimer stating all individuals depicted are 18 or older. The footer has a DMCA/Removal link and a Report Trafficking link — and that second one matters. A directory that won’t let you flag trafficking concerns is one you should be skeptical of. AllEscorts has it in the footer and it goes to an actual page. GDPR cookie consent is granular rather than a fake “accept all” banner. Support is handled through Telegram at @AllEscorts_team, available 24/7 according to the site.
The “Escort Verified” badge is where I have to pause. The verification process is not documented anywhere on the site. Verified against what, exactly? A phone number? An ID? A submitted photo? There’s no explanation, which means the badge tells you that someone went through some process, but you can’t calibrate how much weight to give it. Verification badges that aren’t explained do less work than you’d think.
The direct contact visibility — phone numbers and WhatsApp links fully exposed on every profile — is worth flagging. There’s no intermediary contact layer. That’s convenient for genuine users, but it’s also easier for someone to use a real escort’s profile details fraudulently, or to set up a fake listing with a scam number. This is a common issue across the directory category, not a unique AllEscorts failing, but a newer platform trying to differentiate on trust should probably address it.
The UX Gets a Lot Right for a New Site
I’ve spent most of this review on the gaps. Let me be fair about what works, because a lot of it does.
The design is clean. Profiles load fast. The layout doesn’t feel cluttered. The “Profile Added” date is visible on every listing, which tells you whether the content is fresh or stale. From what I saw, the dates are recent — AllEscorts isn’t recycling old listings to make the directory look fuller than it is. A “Recently Viewed” section saves you from losing track of a profile you wanted to return to. Breadcrumb navigation keeps you oriented inside country and city pages without having to hit the back button repeatedly.
These aren’t flashy features, but they’re the kind of thing that separates a directory that respects your time from one that doesn’t. Getting this right at launch, on a free product, is genuinely impressive compared to what a lot of competitors manage.
Conclusion: AllEscorts Has Promise, but VIP Has to Be Earned

AllEscorts.com is a young directory with enough going for it that I wouldn’t tell you to skip it — especially if you’re in Turkey, the UK, Germany, Austria, or Italy. The free access, the solid filter set, the pricing visible on listing cards, the “Online Now” status, and the cleaner-than-average UX are all advantages that are real and usable right now. This isn’t a spam site duct-taped together to harvest clicks. Someone built it with actual thought.
But the “VIP” label is writing checks the current product can’t cash. Three photos per profile, zero visible reviews, an undocumented verification badge, a missing advertise page for premium tiers, and a USD 10 listing sitting next to a USD 6,600 overnight — those things don’t add up to VIP. They add up to a solid beta that still has a significant amount of work ahead of it.
Who should use it: anyone based in or traveling to Western Europe or Turkey who wants a clean, free starting point with real search filters. You’ll find active listings and you won’t have to hand over a credit card or create an account to see them.
Who should look elsewhere: anyone outside the five covered countries, anyone who needs a full photo gallery to make a decision, or anyone who relies on a working review system before making contact. Those tools aren’t functional yet.
I track a lot of escort directories and adult platforms over at ThePornDude, and AllEscorts is one of the more promising newcomers I’ve come across in a while. It just needs to stop calling itself VIP until the product earns the label. The foundation is there. Build on it.



























