Best subreddits for market research
Reddit is a goldmine for qualitative market research — people describe problems, tools, and spending unprompted. The trick is knowing where to look, and knowing which obvious-sounding subs are the wrong tool.
Most market research is expensive and slow because you have to recruit people, write questions, and hope they tell you the truth. Reddit flips that. People show up already complaining about a problem, already asking which tool to buy, already arguing about what is worth paying for — and they do it unprompted, to strangers, because they are not being sold to. If you read the right threads, you get the raw material of qualitative research for free.
The catch is twofold. First, you have to know where to look, and some of the most obvious-sounding communities are the wrong tool for the job. Second — and this matters — Reddit is qualitative, not representative. It tells you how real people describe a problem in their own words. It does not tell you what share of the market feels that way. Treat it as a source of hypotheses and language, not as a survey.
Below is a genuinely curated list. For each sub we say what it is actually for, who it suits, and where it disappoints. Sizes are approximate as of 2026 — Reddit is phasing out public member counts in favor of Visitors and Contributions metrics, so treat every number as a rough order of magnitude, not a precise headcount.
The roster
Every size is approximate as of 2026 and will drift as Reddit retires public member counts. Use them to gauge rough scale, not to rank precisely.
How to actually mine these subs
- 1
Read the complaint threads
Search within a sub for words like frustrated, hate, broken, gave up, or wish there was. Complaints are unguarded and specific — they name the exact moment a product or workflow fails. That moment is the seed of a market need, described in language no survey would produce.
- 2
Read the recommendation threads
Posts that ask what do you use for X or best tool for Y are a live preference map. Note which products get named repeatedly, which get warned against, and what reason people give. Repeated unprompted mentions are a stronger signal than any vendor comparison page.
- 3
Read the what-do-you-spend threads
Threads about pricing, budgets, and is it worth it reveal willingness to pay — the hardest thing to learn from a stranger. When someone explains why they happily pay for one thing and refuse to pay for another, you are reading qualitative pricing research for free.
The point most lists miss
The best market-research signal is usually not in any of these meta subs. It is in the specific subreddit of the audience you are researching. If you sell scheduling software to dentists, the richest material is in the dentistry community, not in r/marketing — because that is where dentists describe their actual day, their actual tools, and their actual irritations without a marketer in the room.
The meta subs above are where you learn method, calibrate language, and pick up general industry signal. The audience sub is where you find the real pain. Use the meta subs to sharpen your questions, then go find the community that lives the problem. Our guide on how to find subreddits walks through locating that audience sub when it is not obvious.
Honest caveats
Where this approach breaks down, and what each sub will not give you.
- Reddit is qualitative, not representative. It surfaces how people describe a problem, never what share of the market shares it. Do not quote a thread as a statistic.
- r/SampleSize is recruitment only. You post a survey and take others — you do not post questions, discussion, or anything else. The rules are strict and moderators remove off-topic posts fast.
- r/marketresearch is small and method-focused. It is great for how practitioners think, weak as a place to observe end customers. Do not expect it to behave like a large consumer community.
- r/Entrepreneur and r/marketing are large and noisy. Volume cuts both ways — plenty of signal, but also self-promotion and recycled advice. Read with a filter for genuine first-person experience.
- The obvious sub is often the wrong one. A meta marketing sub tells you what marketers think; the audience sub tells you what your buyers feel. Confusing the two is the most common research mistake.
- Selection bias is baked in. People who post are not a random slice of anyone — they skew toward the engaged, the frustrated, and the opinionated. That is useful for finding edges, misleading for finding averages.
From finding subs to understanding them
Finding the right communities is step one. Step two is harder: actually understanding what they say across hundreds of threads. Reading by hand works for a dozen posts and falls apart at scale — you lose track of how often a pain shows up, which tools recur, and whether sentiment is mostly frustration or mostly satisfaction.
This is where rawneed fits. You ask a plain-English question — say, what do small agency owners complain about with their reporting tools — and it gathers the relevant Reddit threads, classifies each one into structured fields like pain intensity, willingness to pay, sentiment, and tools mentioned, then returns a ranked report that links back to every source thread. It does not replace your judgment; it turns a scattered pile of threads into something you can read in one sitting, with the original posts one click away.
See how the classification works
If you want to know exactly what rawneed reads, how it scores pain and willingness to pay, and why every claim links back to a source thread, the methodology is written up in plain language.
Read the methodologyFrequently asked questions
What is the best subreddit for market research?
There is no single best one — it depends on your audience. For general industry signal and method, r/marketing, r/Entrepreneur, and r/marketresearch are strong starting points. But the richest signal is almost always in the specific subreddit of the people you are researching, not in a meta marketing sub.
Can I use Reddit for market research?
Yes, for qualitative research. People describe problems, tools, and spending unprompted, which gives you real language and live hypotheses. What it cannot do is tell you what share of a market feels a certain way — it is a source of insight, not a representative sample.
Where can I post a survey on Reddit?
r/SampleSize is the dedicated place. It is recruitment only and the rules are strict — you post a survey and take others, and you do not post discussion or questions. Many audience subreddits ban surveys outright, so always check the rules before posting elsewhere.
Is Reddit good for finding customer pain points?
It is one of the best free sources. Search complaint threads for words like frustrated or wish there was, recommendation threads for what people use, and pricing threads for what they will pay for. Those three thread types surface pain, preference, and willingness to pay in the customer's own words.
Is Reddit market research representative?
No. People who post skew toward the engaged and the frustrated, so the data is qualitative and biased toward edges, not averages. Use it to discover problems and language, then validate scale with a method built for representativeness, such as a survey.
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