American social news aggregation website and discussion portal

Reddit (/ˈrɛdɪt/ ⓘ RED-it, formerly stylized reddit) is an American proprietary social news aggregation and forum social media platform. Registered users (commonly referred to as "redditors") submit content to the site such … Wikipedia
Factsheet
Type of business Public
Type of site Social news website
Available in Multilingual
Factsheet
Type of business Public
Type of site Social news website
Available in Multilingual
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Reddit
Reddit - Wikipedia
2 days ago - Condé Nast Publications acquired ... market on the morning of March 21, 2024, with the ticker symbol RDDT. The current market cap as of July 2024 is US$10 billion....
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Business of Apps
businessofapps.com › data › reddit revenue and usage statistics (2026)
Reddit Revenue and Usage Statistics (2026) - Business of Apps
2 weeks ago - Reddit was valued at $10 billion in its final funding round before IPO. Its valuation dropped post IPO to $7.8 billion by June 2024. Note: 2024 value is market cap June 15.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/wallstreetbets › not sure i understand the value of reddit as a publicly traded company?
r/wallstreetbets on Reddit: Not sure I understand the value of Reddit as a publicly traded company?
May 22, 2024 -

Reddit has been around for a very longtime, since 2005 as a matter of fact, and yet all this time... it has never been profitable.

I see that Reddit's stock (ticker: RDDT) is up 18.48% at the time of posting since its initial public offering, and after perusing the internet and this sub-Reddit in particular, I noticed that a lot of people have a lot of hope that for some reason, Reddit is just all of a sudden going to start making a profit soon to justify its kind of wacky current valuation.

I know most of you are living in this current environment like me, and think 20 plus valuation multiples are the norm, but sadly... they are not. Especially for a company like Reddit, that keeps on creating and scrapping different ways to become profitable.

Besides the management of the company being completely greedy and incapable of doing their jobs, I would like to point out a few of their past and current failures to profitability:

  • Reddit has and always will be a place for people to express themselves anonymously, the key word there being anonymous, so if they someday decide to take that away from us users in the pursuit of profits, I could see half if not more abandoning the platform entirely.

  • Most of us power users still use "Old Reddit", because the "New Reddit" looks, feels, and operates like total crap. Oh, and the telephone application, assuming it's working, is total crap as well. Without converting us, they have no chance of making money off of us, which makes me sadly think that the board of directors will eventually make the call to end "Old Reddit".

  • Coins were fun, and we were able to earn them without putting our credit cards into the Reddit system, thanks to other generous Redditors awarding our content, which some awards came attached with the gift of Reddit Coins... which again were awesome! We would use these coins to purchase awards for other users, and the pay it forward effectiveness was second to none, and really made me feel good. Sadly... this all got scrapped.

  • Fast forward a little while after awards and coins were gone, and then we get the much hated "super upvote" that nobody asked for. These things literally have to be paid for one transaction at a time, and I believe the cheapest "super upvote" is $1.99. Besides most Redditors not wanting to give up their anonymity, who is going to make 10's of 100's of transactions a day on their credit cards just to award their favorite content creators?

  • Then they created the contributor program, which totally forces Reddit users to give up their anonymity assuming they want to capitalize on this new pay for content model. First though, you have to qualify, and I will let you go look at the requirements for qualification, but I could assure you... most of us will never qualify, and even if we do, we'd make like $4.00 a month, and won't get paid out until we meet a certain threshold no doubt.

  • Then recently, Reddit and the team decided to bring back awards... well like 20 of the 1,000's that used to exist anyway and married them into their new created contributor program. So, with this means is that if you're not a contributor, which again you would have to give up your anonymity and pass the gauntlet of qualifying to become a contributor, you get nothing at all for your rewards. Why would anyone pay Reddit for awards that only really help them? At least before some of the rewards came along with free Reddit Premium subscriptions or Reddit Coins, but now... they do nothing for "non-contributors", so who cares?

Anyway, that's all I got for now. I really love Reddit, but sadly, whenever companies go public, they tend to go full regard, which makes me sad... because soon we may lose our beloved Reddit due to the pursuit of year over year gains.

Are there any positives to any of this, because I would really like to hear what they are in the comments... thanks!

People also ask

How many subreddits are available on Reddit?

There are over 2.2 million subreddits, 130,000 of which are considered active communities

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businessofapps.com
businessofapps.com › data › reddit revenue and usage statistics (2026)
Reddit Revenue and Usage Statistics (2026) - Business of Apps
How much of Reddit’s traffic is from the US?

According to SimilarWeb, over half of Reddit’s traffic is from the US

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businessofapps.com
businessofapps.com › data › reddit revenue and usage statistics (2026)
Reddit Revenue and Usage Statistics (2026) - Business of Apps
How many minutes does the average Reddit user spend on the site?

Users spend on average 10 minutes 23 seconds on Reddit

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businessofapps.com
businessofapps.com › data › reddit revenue and usage statistics (2026)
Reddit Revenue and Usage Statistics (2026) - Business of Apps
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Yahoo! Finance
finance.yahoo.com › quote › RDDT
Reddit, Inc. (RDDT) Stock Price, News, Quote & History - Yahoo Finance
More about Reddit, Inc. ... Trailing total returns as of 1/16/2026, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is S&P 500 (^GSPC) .
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MacroTrends
macrotrends.net › stocks › charts › RDDT › reddit › net-worth
Reddit Net Worth 2023-2025 | RDDT | MacroTrends
Interactive chart of historical ... the current stock price multiplied by the number of shares outstanding. Reddit net worth as of January 15, 2026 is $43.35B....
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Quora
quora.com › How-much-is-Reddit-worth
How much is Reddit worth? - Quora
Answer: TL;DR: $5-10 bn The easiest way to do so would be by using comparable firms. Reddit is in the social media + news domain which makes it a little hard to do so as it doesn't actually have direct peers.
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StockAnalysis
stockanalysis.com › home › stocks › rddt › market cap
Reddit (RDDT) Market Cap & Net Worth
Reddit has a market cap or net worth of $49.06 billion as of January 13, 2026. Its market cap has increased by 57.49% in one year. ... Since March 21, 2024, Reddit's market cap has increased from $8.02B to $49.06B, an increase of 511.71%. That ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/investing › let’s do some very basic math on the reddit stock.
r/investing on Reddit: Let’s do some very basic math on the Reddit stock.
March 22, 2024 -

The market cap is currently at $8B.

There are 73M users.

Half of them are active.

Half of that aren’t bots.

Best case scenario each account represents $109 each.

Realistically that’s $400 an account.

So let me ask you: do you think your account is worth $109 to $400 ?

Puts open on Monday.

Have a great weekend.

Find elsewhere
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The Verge
theverge.com › business › news › tech
Reddit is now valued at more than $10 billion | The Verge
August 12, 2021 - Reddit, the self-declared ‘front page of the internet,’ says it is now valued at more than $10 billion after raising an additional $410 million in funding, with the final round expected to grow to up to $700 million.
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Northeastern Global News
news.northeastern.edu › home › is reddit’s ipo worth it? the social media site is aiming to go public “out of necessity,” says northeastern finance expert
Is Reddit’s IPO Worth It?
May 13, 2024 - Despite never having made a profit in its nearly 20-year history, Reddit, the site that bills itself as “the front page of the internet,” is gearing up to go public, targeting a valuation of about $6.5 billion.
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The Investor's Podcast Network
theinvestorspodcast.com › home › reddit (rddt) intrinsic value: stock valuation
Reddit (RDDT) Intrinsic Value: Stock Valuation
October 6, 2025 - With billions of posts capturing 20+ years of human interaction and conversation, Reddit is an unrivaled corpus of human experience, which is very valuable — just ask the AI companies paying tens of millions of dollars for licensing rights to Reddit’s data, such as Alphabet and OpenAI, to help their models understand how to communicate like a human.
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Al Jazeera
aljazeera.com › economy › social media
Social media company Reddit soars to $9bn valuation in Wall Street debut | Social Media | Al Jazeera
March 22, 2024 - San Francisco-based social media platform's shares close at $50.44 in long-awaited initial public offering.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/self › reddit was sold for $10 million dollars in the mid 2000s. one of the founders and current ceo, steve huffman, admitted the other day that reddit has still never turned a profit. these two facts explain almost everything about management of the site since he took control in 2015.
r/self on Reddit: Reddit was sold for $10 million dollars in the mid 2000s. One of the founders and current CEO, Steve Huffman, admitted the other day that reddit has still never turned a profit. These two facts explain almost everything about management of the site since he took control in 2015.
June 11, 2023 -

Huffman is a libertarian tech bro, and probably prides himself on being a founder of one of the most popular sites on the web.

But he sold way too early before reddit blew up (I'm a near 15 year user of the site and he sold before I joined), and he only made $5 million from the sale before taxes. In Silicon Valley, that's nothing. All the other tech bro startups make the founders 10s if not 100s of millions.

So Steve, who wants to be Mr Badass Bunker Boi, is actually a poor fuck compared to his silicon valley friends. An asshole capitalist like him can't stand this. Me, poor, with my big brain? Never.

That's likely a huge motivation and reason why he came back to reddit. I would bet his number one goal since taking over was to turn reddit profitable and make the IPO so he could finally make the money he thinks he deserves.

The problem?

Reddit has never known how to make money. Huffman is a fucking idiot who lucked into working for Paul Graham and never ran reddit when it was of any actual size. u/yishan is who was at the wheel when reddit ran through its explosive growth post 2009.

Other than founding reddit, and likely only using it pre-2010, Huffman doesn't know the community or how reddit works. He doesn't know how a business works. He doesn't know how tech works. He doesn't know how to lead or manage. He's a guy who hit the tech lottery as dumb teenager.

Reddit has been desperate to try and make money in the past decade, and they have tried and failed at every corner. They've likely burned through all their VC money as interest rates have finally risen post-COVID, and Huffman must be feeling pressures from investors to make money. NOW.

A desperate man in a desperate situation, a narcissistic capitalist who thinks he's more skilled and more knowledgeable than he actually is - is it no surprise that he makes a piss poor decision to overcharge for APIs, and then double down on being a gigantic asshole in the process? He refuses to take any blame or admit fault or error, and will seemingly ride his ship into the iceberg.

Honestly insane how the reddit board hasn't fired this guy after all his gaffes and fuckups over the years. Editing user comments should have warranted a firing years ago.

Oh, and remember how he only made $5 million on the sale of reddit, and the Apollo dev jokingly said "buy me out for $10 million"?

That would absolutely drive Huffman bananas - this 3PA dev working on a reddit app was going to make more selling his product than the founder made for selling the site. The narcissist would never let that happen, even if it was in the best interest of the site to do so.

To put himself and the Apollo dev on the same wealth tier? That's not possible in the mind of tech bro like Huffman. Wealth and money are your value to society, and there's no way some dude making a 3PA should be worth as much as the founder. The Apollo dev didn't realize he had accidentally triggered Huffman's sore spot.

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CompaniesMarketCap
companiesmarketcap.com › reddit › marketcap
Reddit (RDDT) - Market capitalization
As of January 2026 Reddit has a market cap of $42.70 Billion USD. This makes Reddit the world's 564th most valuable company according to our data.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r › whatsthisworth
WhatsThisWorth: Have a unique or unusual item? Find out if you have junk or treasure!
August 27, 2011 - If an art work was originally done in a different medium but then signed and numbered prints are sold, it's essentially a reproduction and value is negligible. It's best to look up the artist on ebay and look at sold prices. Art values are subjective at best, and if you can't find the artist when you Google them it's safe to say they are not worth more than you paid.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/apolloapp › reddit was worth $15b as of 2021, and received $456.38m in revenue within the same year—yet the website "isn't profitable."
r/apolloapp on Reddit: reddit was worth $15b as of 2021, and received $456.38m in revenue within the same year—yet the website "isn't profitable."
June 9, 2023 - Well the $450,000,000 is a tangible real number. It also means they are making more than $1 per user which seems impressive. ... Reddit ads does have the best possible market capitalisation for ads though.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/theoryofreddit › reddit's private market valuation has dropped over 60% since 2021 (theory: they're panicking, and messing up)
r/TheoryOfReddit on Reddit: Reddit's private market valuation has dropped over 60% since 2021 (theory: they're panicking, and messing up)
September 23, 2023 -

Edit: I've already contacted Reddit admins about this, and they have agreed to set up a one-on-one video call about this issue. They know the issue exists. Please do not spam them about this issue, they are aware.

Fidelity, the lead investor in Reddit’s most recent funding round in 2021, has slashed the estimated worth of its equity stake in the popular social media platform by 41% since the investment.

While I don't want to reveal too much about my real-world activities, I'm pretty intimately familiar with the world of finance (and private equity, etc.) and I am familiar with the major stakeholders of Reddit.

Recently, we've noticed topics like Food, Movies, Music, Books, Videos, Humor/Jokes, and many other categories be completely removed from the 'Explore' interface being used by many users to find content on Reddit.

They have 7 options for community types:

Cryptocurrency, Celebrity, Gaming, TV, Sports, and Business

These selections send users to a wide array of cryptocurrency, sports, and other subreddits.

However, any users wishing to browse for another subject are met with a fully-broken experience that appears to be destroying traffic patterns and user flow, effectively choking off what I'd consider "many of Reddit's best and most well-run communities."

(Hint: They aren't Crypto communities, and yes, this is a sore spot - or blind spot, for Reddit.)

We've tried finding very basic subjects through Reddit's new and mobile interfaces, and have been defeated at every turn.

Here is what the issue is, IMO: Reddit is merely doing a word search for any topics outside of the Crypto Fab 7.

  • Want to find a community about Technology? Reddit will show you all the posts with the word "TECHNOLOGY" in them.

  • How about Music? I hope you like this r/mademesmile post about "music to my ears" and r/teenagers post about "Gay music lol"

  • It's clearly broken. Reddit's being taken in some pretty awful directions, and it's taken a huge toll on their stakeholders, who are - let's just assume - absolutely pissed at what's going on.

How is Reddit responding? By trying to monetize Cryptocurrency subreddits and choking off other communities. As if these Crypto communities weren't home to some of the shadiest moderators, including pump-and-dumpers, already - Redditors have lost billions of dollars in these communities, sometimes directly as a result of these communities.

It's not a far stretch to say that subreddits like EarthPorn, Books, Videos, Music, and other well-established subreddits should probably never have been wholesale-removed from Reddit's user exploration and onboarding experiences. This seems, on its face, obviously stupid and wrong.

I don't know what came first - the cart or the horse. Rates rising from 0.25 to over 5.25% in the US are going to light a fire under any high-growth/cash-burn company like Reddit, and making securing additional financing, especially levered loans, an incredibly difficult task

Add to that, any existing debt will need to be refinanced at new, higher rates. While most of this is likely priced in, it seems to me that Reddit has hired far too many people without pro-social skills - people who can't 'read the room.'

Their solution seems to be to monetize these Crypto subreddits, while burning down everything that's built Reddit up. They see the users as cash cows - I suppose because they've already lost billions of dollars.

It's a bit surreal when I'm arguing with Reddit admins - and I'm the one who's on the side of A13Z and other investors, while they're demanding to drive this site into the ground as fast as is possible.

Hyperbolic language, I could be wrong, all of this could be false, this is just my opinion.

Edit: Here's a video we received of someone trying to join Reddit to find music or music discussion, specifically the r/Music community - and failing.

Random Note: Subreddits like r/TaylorSwift are thriving - they're 'Celebrity' subreddits, not 'Music.' They're doing great! Trending celebrity subreddits are unaffected, even if they are involved in books/videos/music/food or other categories. This likely means the issue is easy to fix. We'll see... Maybe we should all make Celebrity/Crypto our primary topics in large subs that have been abandoned.

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Reddit's valuation changed for a variety of reasons, most notably, venture capital cash dried up, interest rates increased, and wall street has begun turning its back on tech companies that operate at a loss. Another thing that changed is the viable methods for tech companies to increase their profits. The only viable strategy (read: the only one that big companies are running with) is some subscription model. Reddit in particular would have a hard time swinging that for a few reasons: The vast majority of redditors lurk without any engagement other than voting. A subscription to lurk is a hard sell for anyone. Twitter was able to do that because twitter, for a lot of people, is a news feed. For reddit, most users are here for entertainment: memes, videos, ect. Reddit has not found an effective way to integrate ads. Reddit's user base is far more advertiser hostile than any other platform, and I'd bet anything reddit has the largest user base with ad blockers installed. On mobile, ads are very obvious and not as frequent as they are on say twitter or facebook. This rules out the ability for reddit to offer a compelling "ad free" subscription model. One of Reddit's most valuable assets is the repository of indexed information it has. Most people discover reddit when searching for something unrelated to the site itself and upon discovering the result on reddit, they click around and stick around. This makes restricting access like Twitter a non-starter as well. For brands, Reddit is not a viable platform to play ball in with so many brand-related subreddits being community run. I can't think of any subreddit where replacing the original moderators with the brand-operated moderators would go over well. For users, reddit HATES redditors, especially redditors from other areas on any given ideological axis. Even r/place , something that should be a "bring everyone together" event, just creates a shit load of drama that annoys everyone else on the site until its over. For reddit's stats, their well has been poisoned for some time. Reddit has a huge bot problem. This works in reddits favor at times (boosting their numbers) but it also really hurts at times (reducing the ratio of users:ads served to users). Reddit can remove bots and I'm sure they can identify a vast majority of them, but just like a tumor, sometimes the removal is just as dangerous as the tumor itself. Reddit is stuck-- they are valuable, they have valuable assets, but they're not making money and their users are incredibly hostile/resistant to change. Reddit is out of it's age of discovery as well-- there are not as many people "discovering" reddit as a platform for the first time as there was just 3 years ago, meaning they've already soaked up most of the users available to them. Reddit tries rolling out new features, but its hard to justify dev time/cost and operational costs associated with experiments when your mainline product is not succeeding in generating revenue. Reddit is not able to "play" with its users and its users are committed (justified or otherwise) to not trusting reddit. These are the issues effecting reddit's valuation. It's not the front page or the organization of the communities. Its not the monetization either (in fact, that's their solution-- how do you incentivize people to post high quality content? By letting them earn money from high quality content). I do not think they are panicking either. Why would they be? IPOing is the end goal, but its not the only method of survival. Reddit's best course of action is to slowly improve its asset (community + content) and its conduit for ads without losing users. I don't think Reddit is losing users in any meaningful way relative to its competitors. They're playing the long con, and their success in that long con is not yet determined. In my opinion, obviously.
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Yeah. I've had a hard time putting into words exactly what's been going on with reddit lately, but it's completely changed after the cut off the third party apps. It seems like they're trying to push more discussion subbreddits as well, like amIWrong, or AITH. The front page is also super weird, posts would linger for days at a time, or switch between different posts every time you refresh. Also trying to browse from your phone browser is getting to be impossible. So it seems Reddit is making changes to do SOMETHING but it's seriously making it impossible to stick around. The site is becoming not just shit, but actually broken and unusable.
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The Guardian
theguardian.com › news › audio › 2024 › apr › 02 › what-is-reddit-really-worth-podast-today-in-focus
What is Reddit really worth? | Reddit | The Guardian
April 3, 2024 - As the Guardian’s UK technology editor Alex Hern tells Helen Pidd, Reddit recently took the ultimate step towards the mainstream: a flotation on the New York Stock Exchange that valued the company at $6.4bn (£51.bn).