Reddit pain-point search: the phrases that signal real demand
The difference between an afternoon of dead ends and a list of real problems is the words you type into the search box.
Reddit search mechanics worth knowing
Reddit’s search is weak, but it has enough levers to be useful once you stop typing single keywords:
- Quoted exact-match — wrap a phrase in quotes ("is there a tool that") so Reddit matches the precise phrasing of frustration instead of scattering across words
- The subreddit: operator — add subreddit:smallbusiness, or run the search from inside a community, to scope to one audience
- Sorting — Top finds the complaints that resonated most; New catches fresh pain that’s still live
- Time filter — constrain Top to the past year to avoid stale problems, or open it to all time to see how long a problem has festered
- Google as backup — site:reddit.com "is there an app for" expense tracking surfaces threads Reddit’s own index misses
Frustration and complaint phrases
Quote these and run them inside your target subs. You’re measuring whether the annoyance is widespread:
- "I hate that"
- "so frustrating"
- "why is there no"
- "drives me crazy"
- "biggest pain"
- "there has to be a better way"
Tool-seeking and explicit demand
The closest thing to a buy signal Reddit offers for free — someone actively looking for a solution:
- "is there a tool that"
- "is there an app for"
- "does anyone know a tool"
- "looking for software to"
- "recommend a tool for"
- "how do I automate"
Workaround and duct-tape phrases
The person already cobbled together a bad solution — that investment proves they value a fix:
- "I use a spreadsheet to"
- "my workaround is"
- "I built a script"
- "we do this manually"
- "currently using Zapier to"
- "hired a VA to"
Switching, churn, and willingness-to-pay phrases
These mean either the market is already validated or a budget already exists:
- "switching from"
- "alternative to"
- "cancelled my subscription"
- "fed up with"
- "I would pay for"
- "shut up and take my money"
- "we currently pay"
- "how much would you pay"
How to score what you find
You’ll surface more threads than you can act on. Weigh each candidate on:
- Frequency — re-search the core phrasing and count separate threads; one is an anecdote, twenty is a market
- Upvotes on the complaint — a crude vote, but a vote
- “Same here” replies — count the distinct people agreeing
- A named budget or tool — proves spend exists and hands you a price anchor
- Recency — a complaint from this month is live; a five-year-old one may be solved
Noise and false positives to ignore
- One-off rants with no agreement — one person having a bad day
- Already-solved problems — if the top reply is “just use [tool]”, the market is served
- Joke and hypothetical threads — if the comments are punchlines, it’s entertainment
- Support questions with an answer — usually a usage question, not a missing product
A 30-minute starter routine
Pick one profession sub and one broad hub (say r/sysadmin and r/smallbusiness). Run five quoted phrases in each — "is there a tool that", "I hate that", "I use a spreadsheet to", "we currently pay", "switching from" — sorted by Top, past year.
Open every result with real agreement in the comments, and for each promising thread paste the problem in the person’s words into a spreadsheet with the link, the sub, and a quick intensity score. That’s one cycle. Repeat across a few more subs over the week and you’ll have a scored shortlist pulled straight from the people who have the problem.
When manual search stops scaling
Six subreddits and twenty phrases means over a hundred searches and hundreds of tabs to dedupe by hand. That’s the seam where a tool earns its place — running the phrase-and-subreddit combinations and returning a ranked report.
See how the pipeline runs these searchesFrequently asked questions
How do I search Reddit for problems to solve?
Search the language of frustration, not the topic. Use quoted phrases like "is there a tool that", "I hate that", and "I use a spreadsheet to", and run them inside subreddits where your target customer gathers. Sort by Top for what resonated and New for fresh pain. Pair Reddit’s own search with Google’s site:reddit.com for phrases Reddit misses.
What phrases show buying intent on Reddit?
Money phrases are strongest: "I would pay for", "shut up and take my money", "we currently pay", and "happy to pay". Close behind are explicit tool-seeking phrases like "is there a tool that", and churn phrases like "switching from" and "alternative to", which mean someone already pays for a solution they dislike.
Is Reddit search or Google better for finding pain points?
Use both. Reddit’s native search is fast for scoping to a subreddit and sorting by upvotes, but its matching is weak. Google with site:reddit.com "your exact phrase" often surfaces threads Reddit misses and matches intent better. Run important phrases through both, since each finds threads the other does not.
How many people complaining counts as real demand?
Look for the same problem across at least three subreddits, from dozens of distinct users, ideally with recent posts. Volume alone isn’t enough; weight it by upvotes, the number of “same here” replies, and any mention of a budget. One thread with a thousand upvotes can outweigh ten quiet threads.
How do I use quotes and operators in Reddit search?
Wrap an exact phrase in double quotes to match it precisely, e.g. "does anyone know a tool". Add subreddit:name to scope to one community, or run the search from inside the sub. Use author:username to read one person’s posts. Switch the sort between Top and New, and set the time filter to control how fresh results are.
Can I automate Reddit pain-point search?
You can. Manual search is best while you’re learning the signals, but it stops scaling once you track many subs and phrases, because deduping and tallying by hand becomes the bottleneck. Tools that pull threads and classify them by pain and willingness-to-pay automate the heavy part. Start manual to build judgment, then add tooling.
Keep reading
Find the pain points your customers never put in a ticket
Surface the frustrations customers vent everywhere except your inbox.
Read →Validate your startup idea with evidence, not optimism
Test a SaaS or startup idea against real demand before you build.
Read →Reddit research: using Reddit as a serious research source
A founder spends a weekend reading 300 threads in three subreddits and walks away knowing exactly how customers describe their problem. This is the guide to doing that on purpose, without fooling yourself.
Read →How to find startup ideas on Reddit
The full method for mining Reddit for real problems people pay to solve — and turning the best complaints into validated ideas.
Read →The best subreddits for finding startup ideas
A categorized directory of the subreddits where founders find real problems — plus how to judge which communities are worth your time.
Read →How to find SaaS ideas on Reddit
The software-specific signals that reveal SaaS ideas hiding in Reddit threads, with worked examples from complaint to product.
Read →