A simple hug can lower a person’s blood pressure and heart rate, and can also generally combat stress. A new app makes it easier to find someone nearby to give you a health-benefitting hug or to hold you just a little longer.

Cuddlr connects app users to other people who want to cuddle without any pressure or expectations, according to the app’s website. The service provides cuddlers within walking distance and the directions to meet up. The cuddle session can take place in public or private, and cuddlers don’t receive a location until both participants agree to meet.

“Platonic cuddling isn’t something that’s part of our culture right now,” Cuddlr founder Charlie Williams told Salon.

The website insists Cuddlr is not another “hook-up” app like Tinder or Grindr. It’s strictly a “PG-rated” experience. If cuddlers do want to advance the relationship (i.e. coffee date or more intimacy), the app encourages the person wait until after the cuddle session ends to introduce a new activity.

“Keep your cuddle a cuddle, don’t try to ‘change gears’ midway through. And certainly don’t use this app to pick people up,” Williams said. “Sex is a great thing too, but there are other apps for that. Use those ones if that’s what you’re looking for.”

At the end of a cuddle, users can rate their fellow cuddler. Those with more bad reports won’t likely have their cuddle request accepted, and the app administrators will ban anyone who uses the service improperly. Users can also block anyone they don’t want to see or hear from in their potential cuddler options.

Williams and his team are considering adding options like “cuddle styles.” For now, specifics of the cuddle will be handled when the two people meet up.

The Cuddlr app is available in the iTunes store.