Find old Reddit posts

How to find old Reddit posts

Old threads do not vanish — they get buried. Here are five methods, ordered from easiest to most powerful, for surfacing posts and comments that are still live but hard to reach.

There are two very different reasons a Reddit post feels lost. Either it still exists and you simply cannot find it, or it was deleted and the original text is gone. This guide is about the first case — content that is still live somewhere on Reddit but buried under years of newer threads, weak relevance ranking, or a vague memory of what it said.

If the post or comment was actually removed by a moderator, deleted by its author, or scrubbed by the user, that is a separate problem with separate tools. See the deleted-posts guide linked at the end — do not expect the methods here to resurrect text that no longer exists.

The methods below run from least to most effort. Try them in order. If you know who posted something, start at the top. If you only remember a distinctive phrase, jump to the Google method, which is the single most reliable approach for general searches.

Why old posts are hard to find

Reddit's native search was built for recency and relevance, not archival digging. By default it leans toward newer and more active threads, and its relevance matching is weak compared with a general search engine. A five-year-old comment that perfectly answers your question can sit several pages deep, or simply never surface, unless you give the search something specific to grab onto.

The fix is almost always specificity. A unique phrase, a known username, a subreddit name, or an exact URL turns an impossible search into a quick one. Vague queries against old content are where people get stuck — and where some content is genuinely unrecoverable by keyword alone.

Five methods, easiest to most powerful

  1. 1

    Browse the author's profile history (if you know who posted)

    When you remember the username, this is the fastest route. Go to reddit.com/user/<username>, then open the Posts or Comments tab. Both are sortable by New, Top, and Controversial, so you can jump to a person's oldest or highest-voted contributions directly. This sidesteps search entirely — you are reading a chronological list rather than guessing keywords. It only fails if the account was deleted or the specific item was removed.

  2. 2

    Search Google with site:reddit.com and specific keywords

    This is the most powerful general method. In Google, type site:reddit.com followed by your most distinctive keywords — a phrase you remember, a product name, an error message. Google maintains a deep, licensed index of Reddit content, so it often surfaces old threads that Reddit's own search misses entirely. Add the subreddit to narrow further, for example site:reddit.com/r/cooking sourdough starter smell. Note that Bing and DuckDuckGo are unreliable for recent Reddit content, so prefer Google here.

  3. 3

    Use native search with time set to all and operators

    Inside Reddit, open search and set the time filter to All time, then choose a sort — Top to find the most-upvoted historical threads, New to walk backward chronologically. Because native relevance is weak, lean on operators to be specific: subreddit:cooking narrows to one community, and author:username restricts to one person. Combining a precise query with time=all and a sort is the best Reddit can do on its own.

  4. 4

    Pull an archived snapshot from the Wayback Machine

    If you have the post's URL but the page itself is gone or changed, paste that URL into web.archive.org. The Wayback Machine stores periodic snapshots of public web pages and works completely independently of Reddit, so it can show you what a thread looked like on a given date. This is your fallback when a known URL no longer renders the content you remember. Google's own cached-page feature was retired, so the Wayback Machine — not a search-engine cache — is the tool for this.

  5. 5

    Request your own full data from Reddit

    For your own history specifically, Reddit can hand you everything. Go to Settings, then Privacy, then Request your data. Reddit compiles a complete export of your posts and comments and emails you a link. This takes days to weeks to arrive, so it is not for an urgent lookup — but it is the most thorough record of your own activity, including items that are hard to page back to manually.

Which method fits your situation

What you haveBest methodWhy
The usernameProfile historySortable lists skip search entirely
A distinctive phraseGoogle site:reddit.comDeep licensed index beats native search
A subreddit and rough topicNative search, time all + operatorssubreddit: and sort narrow the field
The exact URLWayback MachineArchived snapshot, independent of Reddit
It is your own postRequest your dataComplete export, slow but total

These find content that still exists. If the text was deleted, none of them recover it — see the deleted-posts guide.

Tips that make every method work better

Specificity is the common thread. A few habits raise your hit rate across all five approaches.

  • Lead with the most unusual word or phrase you remember — distinctive terms cut through ranking noise far better than common ones.
  • If you recall the community, always add the subreddit, either as subreddit: in native search or as /r/<name> in a Google query.
  • When a search returns nothing, broaden one term at a time rather than rewriting the whole query, so you can tell which word was too narrow.
  • For the Wayback Machine, try the post URL with and without trailing slashes or query strings — snapshots are stored per exact URL.
  • Be honest about the limits: very old or obscure content with no distinctive keywords and no known author can be genuinely hard to find by any method.

When you are researching, not just retrieving

Finding one buried post is a lookup. Understanding what an entire community has said about a topic over years is research — and that is a different job. Reading thread after thread by hand, trying to tally how often a pain shows up or whether people sound willing to pay for a fix, does not scale past a handful of posts.

That is the gap structured Reddit research fills. Instead of hunting one URL at a time, you start from a plain-English question, gather the relevant threads, and get them classified by signal — pain, willingness to pay, sentiment, tools mentioned — into a ranked report where every claim links back to its source thread. You still see the raw posts; you just are not the one reading all of them to find the pattern.

From finding posts to reading a whole community

Manual search is right for tracking down a single old thread. When you need to understand what hundreds of threads say about a topic — and trace every conclusion back to the post it came from — a structured, observational approach scales where hand-searching stops. See how the method works under the hood.

See the methodology

Frequently asked questions

How do I find a Reddit post from years ago?

If you know the username, browse that profile's Posts or Comments tab sorted by New or Top. If you only remember the content, search Google with site:reddit.com plus your most distinctive keywords — Google's deep index of Reddit usually beats native search for old threads. Inside Reddit, set the time filter to All time and add operators like subreddit: and author: to be specific.

Can I see old Reddit posts that are no longer on the front page?

Yes — posts that are still live never disappear, they just get buried. Use a user's profile history if you know who posted, or set Reddit's native search to All time and sort by Top to surface old high-voted threads. For a post you have the URL for, the Wayback Machine can show an archived snapshot.

How can I find my own old Reddit comments and posts?

Open your profile and use the Comments and Posts tabs, sorted by New or Top, to page through manually. For a complete record, go to Settings, then Privacy, then Request your data — Reddit will email you a full export of your history. The export is thorough but takes days to weeks to arrive.

Why can't I find an old post with Reddit search?

Reddit's native search favors recency and has weak relevance matching, so old threads sink unless your query is specific. Add a distinctive phrase, set the time filter to All time, and use subreddit: and author: operators. If it still does not surface, try Google with site:reddit.com, which indexes Reddit more deeply than the native search.

Does Google cache or the Wayback Machine work for old Reddit pages?

Use the Wayback Machine, not Google cache. Google retired its cached-page feature, so the way to see an archived version of a Reddit page is to paste the post URL into web.archive.org. It stores periodic snapshots independently of Reddit and works even when the live page has changed.

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