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How to advertise on Reddit in 2026: Setup, targeting, and what actually converts

Last Date Updated:
May 5, 2026
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14 minute read
Reddit advertising has moved from niche experiment to serious paid channel. In 2026, Reddit reaches 391 million weekly active users, delivers CPCs 40 to 80% lower than LinkedIn, and generates brand trust at rates that outperform most social platforms. This guide covers campaign setup, ad formats, targeting strategy, native creative, MAX Campaigns, cost benchmarks, and accurate performance measurement.
How to advertise on Reddit in 2026_ setup, targeting, and what actually converts
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Key takeaways (TL;DR)
Reddit's average CPC is $0.59 versus $1.33 on Meta and $4 to $5 on Google Search. B2B qualified lead CPAs on Reddit average $50 to $100 compared to $120 to $200 on LinkedIn.
Subreddit targeting is Reddit's core differentiator. Mid-tier communities with 100,000 to 500,000 members deliver comparable engagement to premium subreddits at 30 to 40% lower CPMs.
Reddit ad creative must match the tone of the subreddit it appears in. Corporate-style copy gets ignored or downvoted. Native-style copy converts.

Most paid media budgets default to Google, Meta, and LinkedIn. Reddit gets skipped because it feels harder to read and riskier to get wrong. That hesitation is giving competitors a real cost advantage. Reddit's ad revenue grew 74% year-over-year to $2.1 billion in 2025. The platform reaches more than 391 million weekly active users, and the audience arrives with research intent, not passive scrolling behavior.

This guide covers the full setup process: how to structure a first campaign, which ad formats convert best, how to target communities where your buyers already spend time, how to write copy that does not get downvoted, and how to measure results accurately in a platform that attributes value differently from every other channel.

Why Reddit advertising works differently in 2026

Reddit users arrive with research intent. Nine in ten trust the platform to help them learn about new products and brands, and one in three turn to Reddit specifically for reviews and recommendations before making a purchase decision. That is a different audience posture than passive social scrolling. Reddit rewards brands that contribute value and punishes brands that interrupt. Understanding that distinction is the foundation of every tactic in this guide.

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According to Reddit platform data cited by ALM Corp, 75% of users who conduct purchase research on Reddit follow through and buy based on that research. The median household income of Reddit users sits at $115,000. This is not a cheap traffic source in terms of audience quality. It is a cost-efficient channel for reaching high-intent, high-income users who are actively comparing options.

Reddit users are also 46% more likely to trust brands that advertise on Reddit versus those that do not. Consumers reached through Reddit show 1.7x higher brand association, according to Reddit and FanIQ research compiled by SHNO. These numbers indicate that Reddit creates a different category of brand relationship than standard social advertising.

The September 2025 algorithm shift

In September 2025, Reddit updated its algorithm to prioritize engagement quality over volume. One thoughtful comment from an invested community member now outweighs dozens of shallow reactions. For advertisers, this means ads generating genuine discussion receive preferential distribution. Ads that look promotional and generate downvotes or negative comments perform poorly in the auction. The algorithm reads community sentiment as a quality signal, making creative authenticity a direct performance variable.

Reddit's role in AI search

Reddit threads rank in Google Search results and feed AI Overviews at a higher rate than most content types. When your ad drives meaningful engagement in a subreddit, that discussion can surface in generative search responses weeks or months later. Brands investing in generative engine optimization increasingly treat Reddit as a distribution layer, not just a paid channel. The compounding effect of Reddit engagement on AI search visibility is a dimension that no competing guide currently addresses.

How to set up your first Reddit ad campaign

Setting up a Reddit Ads campaign requires an account at ads.reddit.com, a clear campaign objective, a minimum daily budget of $50 for automated campaigns, two to four tightly focused ad groups, and three to five creative variations per ad group. Start with subreddit targeting only. Add keyword targeting in a second ad group. Keep interest targeting as a separate test. Do not mix targeting types within a single ad group.

The Reddit campaign setup checklist

Reddit's learning algorithm needs clean signals to optimize. When you mix targeting types inside one ad group, the system cannot determine which signal is driving performance, and optimization stalls.

Step-by-step campaign setup

  1. Go to ads.reddit.com and create an account linked to your Reddit profile.
  2. Click "Create Campaign" and select your objective. Choose Conversions if you have tracking in place. Choose Traffic if you are still building your attribution setup.
  3. Set your budget. Allocate at least $50 per day per campaign during the learning phase. At $10 per day, the algorithm lacks enough data to optimize.
  4. Create your first ad group. Name it by targeting type, such as "Subreddit targeting" or "Keyword targeting."
  5. Select your targeting method for that ad group. For a first campaign, start with three to five highly relevant subreddits.
  6. Set your bid strategy to Lowest Cost for the first seven to 14 days. Switch to Cost Cap once you have baseline CPA data.
  7. Upload three to five creative variations. Include at least one text-heavy native post and one image-based variation.
  8. Install the Reddit Pixel via Google Tag Manager before launching. Without pixel data, you cannot optimize for conversions or build retargeting audiences.
  9. Enable comments on your ads. Pinning a brand reply in the comment section after launch is one of the most underused conversion tactics on the platform.
  10. Wait seven to 14 days before making major changes. Evaluate performance after the algorithm has processed at least 15 to 20 conversions.

The over-segmentation mistake

The most common setup error is trying to be too precise too early. The paid media team at SubredditSignals put it directly: most Reddit advertisers target 20 subreddits, 30 keywords, and 10 creatives on a $30 daily budget, and this kills learning because the algorithm does not have enough volume in any segment to optimize.

One advertiser who reduced targeting filters from eight demographic controls to two geographic controls saw 34% more conversions at 18% lower CPA, simply by giving Reddit's algorithm more room to find its best audience. Start with two to four ad groups total and expand from data, not assumptions.

The five Reddit ad formats and which to use first

Reddit offers five main ad formats: free-form ads, image ads, video ads, carousel ads, and conversation ads. For a first campaign, start with free-form ads. They look like native Reddit posts, support text, images, and links in a single unit, and give the most flexibility to test different angles. Video ads are the most underpriced format on the platform at $0.02 to $0.08 per view, making them worth testing as a second format once you have baseline data.

Format breakdown

FormatBest forPricing modelKey note
Free-form adsAwareness, education, product launchesCPM or CPCMost native-looking format. Closest to an organic post.
Image adsProduct promotion, brand awarenessCPMSimple to produce. Works best with UGC-style visuals.
Video adsTutorials, demos, product featuresCPV ($0.02-$0.08)Most underpriced format. 30-60% cheaper than YouTube and Meta.
Carousel adsMulti-product showcases, step-by-step contentCPM or CPCGood for ecommerce. Allows multiple images or videos per unit.
Conversation adsHigh-intent placements inside active threadsCPM or CPCAppears in comment sections where users are already engaged.

According to Reddit's 2026 cost breakdown published by Stackmatix, video ads deliver 30 to 60% savings compared to YouTube and Meta on a cost-per-view basis. Conversion campaigns cost two to three times more per click than awareness campaigns, so budget to match the objective, not just the daily spend.

For ecommerce and DTC brands, Dynamic Product Ads (DPA) are worth prioritizing from the start. Reddit's own Q1 2025 platform data showed DPA generating approximately 2x higher ROAS versus standard conversion campaigns in comparable tests.

Reddit ad format performance overview

How to target the right audiences on Reddit

Reddit offers four targeting methods: subreddit targeting, interest targeting, keyword targeting, and conversation targeting. Subreddit targeting delivers the highest relevance for cold campaigns because it places your ad in front of users already in the mindset of your topic. Keep each targeting method in its own separate ad group so performance data stays clean and the algorithm can optimize each signal independently.

Subreddit targeting

Subreddit targeting places your ad inside specific communities. The strength is contextual relevance: your ad appears to users who are already thinking about the problem your product solves. A project management tool targeting r/projectmanagement reaches users actively discussing workflow problems, not users who once clicked on a productivity article.

The key insight most advertisers miss is that bigger subreddits are not always better. Mid-tier subreddits with 100,000 to 500,000 members deliver engagement rates comparable to premium communities at CPMs 30 to 40% lower. Premium subreddit CPMs are rising 15 to 25% year-over-year as more advertisers compete for the same top communities. Mid-tier communities remain underpriced by comparison.

Find your target subreddits by searching Google for "[your keyword] site:reddit.com" to see which communities produce the most active discussions, then cross-reference with Reddit Ads Manager's suggested related communities during ad group setup.

Keyword and conversation targeting

Keyword targeting serves your ads to users who have recently engaged with posts or comments containing specific words or phrases. According to Reddit's own platform data, adding keyword targeting increases CTR by 29.6% compared to community or interest targeting alone. A user asking "Jira alternative?" or "best CRM for a 10-person team?" is in active evaluation mode. That is the intent keyword targeting captures.

Conversation targeting goes a step further, analyzing the sentiment and context of ongoing discussions to find the most relevant moments for your ad to appear. Use it for high-intent scenarios where timing matters, such as targeting threads where users are actively requesting product recommendations.

Custom and lookalike audiences

Upload your existing customer email list to Reddit Ads Manager to build a custom audience for retargeting. From that base, create a lookalike to find new users who share behavioral and interest traits with your best customers. Reddit requires audiences of at least 50,000 to 100,000 users for effective delivery. If your retargeting pool is small, broaden it by adding users who visited high-intent pages such as pricing, demo request, or comparison pages.

How to write Reddit ad creative that converts

Reddit ad copy must sound like it was written by someone who uses the platform, not by a marketing department. Ads written in corporate language get downvoted and ignored. Ads written in the tone of the subreddit they target earn engagement, comments, and conversions. Lead with the problem the community cares about. Name the subreddit when appropriate. End with a clear, low-friction next step.

The paid media team at 97th Floor frames the fundamental challenge clearly: Reddit is built around communities first, ads second. People come to Reddit to learn, debate, and share opinions. Advertising works when it feels like a natural extension of the conversation, not an interruption of it.

Native vs corporate creative: a direct example

Bad Reddit ad copy (corporate style): "Introducing our revolutionary project management solution with best-in-class features. Try it free today."

Better Reddit ad copy (native style): "We built this after our team spent six months in r/projectmanagement and kept running into the same three complaints: no real timeline view, broken integrations, and support that disappears after onboarding. Here is what we did differently, and why 2,000 teams switched in the last six months."

The second version names the community, acknowledges a specific frustration, and uses social proof in a way that feels like a post, not an ad.

Comment management as a conversion lever

Enable comments on every Reddit ad you run. After launch, post a brand reply and pin it at the top of the comment thread. Use it to address the most likely objection: pricing, comparison to a competitor, or how the product handles a specific use case the subreddit cares about. This action consistently improves downstream CPA by addressing objections before the click, and it costs nothing beyond the time to write the reply.

Common creative mistakes to avoid

  • Using polished stock imagery. Reddit users respond better to screenshots, product demos, and UGC-style visuals.
  • Leading with the product name. Lead with the problem or the outcome instead.
  • Using a hard CTA like "Buy now" on a first cold touch. Offer a free resource, a checklist, or a benchmark report instead.
  • Ignoring the comment section after launch. Negative comments left unanswered reinforce skepticism and suppress ad performance.
  • Running the same creative across different subreddits. A tone that works in r/startups will not land in r/personalfinance.

"The copy that wins on Reddit reads like someone inside the community wrote it. If your ad sounds like a press release, Reddit users will treat it like one." Tanner Medina, Co-Founder & Chief Growth Officer

Reddit advertising costs: What to expect in 2026

Reddit's average CPC of $0.59 compares to $1.33 on Meta and $4 to $5 on Google Search. Reddit's eCPM of $2.29 compares to $11.73 on Meta, a 5.1x cost advantage at comparable CTRs of approximately 0.5%. Reddit CPCs run 40 to 80% lower than LinkedIn and 50 to 70% lower than Google Search for comparable audiences. Actual costs vary by industry, subreddit, and creative quality. Use the figures below as planning baselines, not guarantees.

Industry benchmark ranges table graphic

Platform cost comparison

PlatformAverage eCPMAverage CPCBest for
Reddit$2.29 - $12.00$0.59 - $2.00Intent-based community targeting, B2B research-phase audiences
Meta$11.73$1.33Broad reach, retargeting, visual product campaigns
Google SearchN/A$4.00 - $5.00High-intent direct conversion, bottom-funnel
LinkedIn$25.00+$5.00 - $15.00Firmographic targeting, enterprise B2B

Source: Reddit investor relations data and FanIQ comparative analysis via SHNO, 2025.

Industry benchmark ranges

IndustryCPC rangeCPA rangeNotes
B2B SaaS$0.50 - $2.00$50 - $100 per qualified leadSignificantly cheaper than LinkedIn
Ecommerce and DTC$0.20 - $0.50$5 - $15 per customerDPA recommended for catalog brands
GamingUnder $0.50$2 - $8 per installHighest CTR of any category on Reddit
Fintech$0.50 - $1.00$10 - $30 per signupStrong in r/personalfinance and r/investing

The real cost advantage of Reddit is not raw CPC. As Stackmatix's cross-platform CPC analysis notes, leads from technical subreddits convert at higher rates because users arrive with more product knowledge than a user coming from a Facebook or LinkedIn ad. Cost-per-qualified-result is the metric that matters, not cost-per-click in isolation.

Reddit vs other paid platforms cost comparison

Reddit MAX campaigns: When to use AI-powered targeting

MAX Campaigns, launched by Reddit in January 2026, use AI to dynamically optimize bids, placements, and audience targeting in real time. Early adopters report 15 to 25% CPC improvements through automated optimization. Use MAX Campaigns after you have baseline conversion data from a standard campaign. The AI optimizes based on historical conversion signals, and those signals need to exist before the system can perform.

US ad spending on Reddit surged 46.3% year-over-year as of November 2025, outpacing every major social platform. MAX Campaigns are driving a significant portion of that growth as larger advertisers increase Reddit budgets and automate optimization.

MAX campaigns vs standard campaigns decision matrix

How MAX campaigns differ from standard campaigns

Standard Reddit campaigns require pre-selecting audiences: specific subreddits, keyword sets, and interest categories. MAX Campaigns take a different approach. The system dynamically identifies users most likely to convert based on conversational signals, community participation patterns, real-time intent from comments and posts, and trending discussions. It adjusts continuously, expanding into high-performing segments and pulling back from underperforming ones without manual input.

"The mistake most advertisers make with MAX Campaigns is treating it like a toggle. You turn it on and expect results. It needs clean conversion data first. Without that foundation, the AI is optimizing toward noise, not signal." Derick Do, Co-Founder & Chief Product Officer

When to use MAX vs standard campaigns

ScenarioRecommended approach
First campaign, no conversion historyStandard campaign with subreddit targeting
Budget under $50 per dayStandard; MAX needs volume to learn
Very niche B2B audienceStandard with tight subreddit list
Ecommerce with active conversion trackingMAX Campaigns, especially with DPA
Scaling a campaign with 15+ weekly conversionsMAX Campaigns

The key mistake with MAX Campaigns is adding too many restrictions. Extensive subreddit lists, narrow interest filters, and tight demographic constraints prevent the AI from finding high-performing audiences you did not anticipate. Add exclusions only for clear brand safety reasons and let the system discover audiences from there.

How to measure Reddit ad performance accurately

Reddit frequently drives assisted conversions rather than direct last-click conversions. A user sees your ad, reads the comments, leaves without clicking, then searches your brand name on Google two days later and converts. Standard last-click attribution assigns zero credit to Reddit in this scenario. To measure Reddit's full contribution, install the Reddit Pixel via Google Tag Manager, set up the Reddit Conversions API (CAPI) for server-side tracking, import Reddit spend into GA4, and monitor brand search volume lift in Google Search Console as a secondary indicator.

The GA4 native integration with Reddit Ads launched in July 2025 and pulls spend, clicks, and impressions directly into your analytics without manual uploads. Pair this with a Looker Studio dashboard connected to your Reddit Ads Manager data for automated daily reporting.

How Reddit attribution actually works

The four metrics that matter most

  • Cost per acquisition (CPA): The primary efficiency metric for conversion campaigns. Compare against your LinkedIn and Google benchmarks to evaluate Reddit's relative performance.
  • Upvote rate: A Reddit-specific signal. Target above 0.5%. An upvote rate below this level indicates your creative is not resonating with the community it is targeting.
  • Brand search volume lift: Track week-over-week in Google Search Console after launching a Reddit campaign. A consistent lift in branded search is a reliable indicator that Reddit is driving awareness that converts through other channels.
  • Assisted conversions: Check in GA4 under the attribution reporting view. Reddit appears most often in early touchpoints of multi-step conversion paths, especially for B2B and SaaS brands with longer sales cycles.

Setting realistic attribution expectations

Reddit's default attribution window is a 28-day click window and a 7-day view-through window. For B2B campaigns with 30 to 90-day sales cycles, extend the click window and rely more heavily on brand search lift as a proxy for Reddit's contribution. For ecommerce campaigns, tighten the view-through window to one day to avoid overcounting. Align these settings with the attribution windows you use for other paid channels so cross-channel comparisons stay valid.

Reddit advertising for B2B and SaaS brands

B2B and SaaS brands often skip Reddit in favor of LinkedIn. Reddit's B2B qualified lead CPA averages $50 to $100, compared to $120 to $200 on LinkedIn for comparable audiences. Reddit does not offer LinkedIn's firmographic targeting, but subreddit targeting compensates by placing your ad in front of self-selected professional communities already discussing the exact problems your product solves. The intent is behavioral rather than demographic, and that difference in intent quality matters.

At Launchcodex, B2B clients consistently underallocate to Reddit while overpaying on LinkedIn. The insight is simple: subreddit selection replaces firmographic targeting. The right subreddit is more valuable than the right job title filter.

High-value B2B subreddits by function

  • r/devops: 200,000+ members; active discussion on infrastructure, automation, and tooling
  • r/salesops: Revenue operations professionals discussing CRM, pipeline management, and process
  • r/startups: Founders and early-stage operators evaluating tools and vendors
  • r/marketing: Marketing professionals; good for SaaS tools targeting marketing teams
  • r/dataengineering: Data professionals; strong for data infrastructure, analytics, and pipeline tools
  • r/projectmanagement: Operations leads evaluating workflow and project software

The B2B creative framework

Target the problem, not the product. A data tool should not lead with "our pipeline is 10x faster." It should lead with "r/dataengineering was right about dbt. Here is what we added to make it work at scale for distributed teams." This approach names the community, validates its existing knowledge, and positions the product as a natural extension of the conversation already happening in the subreddit.

Offer a free resource, benchmark report, or tool as the CTA rather than a direct demo request. Lower-friction asks convert better in communities that are skeptical of overt sales tactics. For B2B campaigns, allocate budget between two ad groups: one targeting three to five subreddits by role, and one targeting high-commercial-intent keywords like "alternatives," "switching from," or "best tool for" phrases. Run these as separate ad groups to keep performance data clean.

Build your Reddit ad strategy on data, then scale

Reddit advertising in 2026 rewards marketers who treat the platform on its own terms. It is not a cheaper version of LinkedIn or a niche alternative to Meta. It runs on different user behavior, different creative requirements, and a different attribution pattern that standard last-click measurement consistently undercounts.

Start with a standard campaign, two to four ad groups with clean targeting separation, a $50 daily minimum, and native-style creative that sounds like it belongs in the community you are targeting. Give the learning algorithm 7 to 14 days before making changes. Measure with Reddit Pixel plus CAPI plus GA4 and brand search lift, not last-click only. Move to MAX Campaigns after you have 15 to 20 weekly conversions to train the system on clean signal.

For teams building performance media plans that integrate Reddit into a full paid channel mix alongside Google, Meta, and LinkedIn, the same logic applies: prove efficiency at small scale, validate attribution across the full funnel, then scale what the data supports.

The brands winning on Reddit are not the ones with the biggest budgets. They are the ones who read the community before they write the ad.

FAQ

How much does it cost to advertise on Reddit?

Reddit's average CPC is $0.59, compared to $1.33 on Meta and $4 to $5 on Google Search. CPMs range from $2.29 to $12.00 depending on targeting. B2B qualified lead CPAs average $50 to $100, significantly lower than LinkedIn's $120 to $200 range. Plan a minimum daily budget of $50 for automated campaigns to give Reddit's algorithm enough data to optimize.

Do Reddit ads work for B2B and SaaS companies?

Yes. Subreddits like r/devops, r/salesops, r/startups, and r/dataengineering contain self-selected professional audiences actively discussing the problems B2B products solve. Reddit CPAs for qualified B2B leads run $50 to $100 versus $120 to $200 on LinkedIn. The targeting is intent-based rather than firmographic, but the quality of intent in the right subreddit is high.

What is the best Reddit ad format for a first campaign?

Free-form ads are the best starting point. They look like native Reddit posts, support text, images, and links in one unit, and give you the most flexibility to test different angles. Video ads are the most underpriced format at $0.02 to $0.08 per view and are worth testing as a second format once baseline data exists.

What are Reddit MAX campaigns?

MAX Campaigns, launched in January 2026, use AI to dynamically optimize bids, placements, and audience targeting in real time. They identify high-converting audiences based on conversational signals and community behavior rather than pre-selected targeting criteria. Use MAX Campaigns after collecting baseline conversion data from a standard campaign.

Why do Reddit ads seem to drive fewer conversions than expected?

Reddit frequently drives assisted conversions rather than direct last-click conversions. Users see your ad, read the comments, leave without clicking, then search for your brand later and convert through Google. Standard last-click attribution assigns zero credit to Reddit in this scenario. Install the Reddit Pixel and CAPI, import data into GA4, and track brand search volume lift in Google Search Console to capture Reddit's full contribution.

How do I find the right subreddits to target?

Search Google for your product category plus "site:reddit.com" to find the most active communities discussing your topic. Cross-reference with Reddit Ads Manager's suggested related communities during ad group setup. Prioritize mid-tier subreddits with 100,000 to 500,000 members over the largest communities. They deliver comparable engagement at 30 to 40% lower CPMs.

Launchcodex author image - Derick Do
— About the author
Derick Do
- Co-Founder & Chief Product Officer
Derick leads product and AI innovation at Launchcodex. He focuses on building scalable systems that automate workflows and turn strategy into measurable outcomes. He bridges technical thinking with real business impact.
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