The front page of the internet — community platform, data goldmine, and ad-tech upstart
Reddit is a social news aggregation and discussion platform organized into user-created communities called subreddits. Founded in 2005 by Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian, it was acquired by Condé Nast in 2006, spun back out as an independent entity in 2011, and went public on the NYSE in March 2024 under the ticker RDDT.
With over 100,000 active subreddits and content spanning every conceivable niche, Reddit has become the internet's de facto forum layer — the place users append "reddit" to Google searches to find authentic human opinions. That behavior, combined with landmark AI data-licensing deals and an aggressive advertising push, transformed Reddit from a perpetually unprofitable community site into a $2B+ revenue machine in under two years post-IPO.
Reddit priced its IPO at $34 per share on March 20, 2024, selling 22 million shares and valuing the company at roughly $6.5 billion — a notable haircut from its 2021 private valuation of $10 billion. Shares opened at ~$47 on March 21 and climbed steadily as the company demonstrated accelerating revenue growth.
| Milestone | Date | Price / Value |
|---|---|---|
| IPO Pricing | Mar 20, 2024 | $34/share · $6.5B valuation |
| First Trading Day Close | Mar 21, 2024 | ~$50.44 (+48%) |
| All-Time Low | Apr 18, 2024 | $37.35 |
| All-Time High | Sep 18, 2025 | $282.95 |
| First Full-Year Profitability | FY 2024 | Net income positive |
| $1B Buyback Announced | Early 2025 | $1B share repurchase program |
| Metric | FY 2023 | FY 2024 | FY 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue | ~$804M | ~$1.3B | $2.2B |
| Advertising Revenue | $788M | ~$1.1B | $2.1B |
| YoY Revenue Growth | — | ~62% | 69% |
| Gross Margin | ~86% | 90.5% | ~91% |
| Net Income | Negative | Positive (first time) | Positive |
| Q4 2024 Revenue | — | $427.7M (+71% YoY) | — |
Reddit crossed the 1 billion monthly active users milestone, with approximately 194.8 million MAU in the United States alone. Daily active unique users (DAUq) reached 108.1 million in Q1 2025, up 39% year-over-year. Users created over 2.16 billion posts and comments in H1 2025 — a 6.4% increase over H2 2024.
Reddit's user-generated content — billions of posts and comments spanning two decades — has become one of the most valuable datasets for training large language models. The company has aggressively monetized this asset:
| Partner | Deal Value | Date | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| ~$60M/year | Feb 2024 | Content licensing for AI training; enhanced search integration | |
| OpenAI | ~$70M (reported) | May 2024 | ChatGPT allowed to surface Reddit content; training access |
| Google (renewal) | Under negotiation | Sep 2025 | Dynamic pricing model; linked to traffic attribution |
| Microsoft | Reported talks | 2025 | Potential content-sharing deal in discussion |
AI licensing revenue currently accounts for ~5–10% of total revenue but is considered the company's highest-margin growth vector. Reddit's data moat is formidable: it's the largest corpus of authentic, threaded human discourse on the internet.
In April 2023, Reddit announced it would begin charging for API access — previously free since 2008. The pricing structure was set so high that popular third-party apps like Apollo, Narwhal, and BaconReader could not afford to continue operating.
Over 8,000 subreddits went dark in one of the largest coordinated protests in internet history. Moderators who had spent years building communities felt their volunteer labor was being disrespected. Key events:
One of the most remarkable developments in Reddit's recent history is its explosive growth in Google Search visibility. Following the Google–Reddit content deal announced in February 2024, Reddit's organic search traffic surged dramatically:
Advertising is Reddit's core business, generating $2.1 billion in 2025 — the first time the platform surpassed $2B in annual ad revenue. Growth has been driven by:
| Year | Ad Revenue | Growth |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $788M | — |
| 2024 | ~$1.1B | ~40% |
| 2025 | $2.1B | ~74% |
Reddit's cultural footprint is unique among social platforms. Key cultural dynamics:
Reddit runs on unpaid volunteer labor. Moderators manage communities, enforce rules, and shape culture — all for free. This model creates enormous value but also enormous risk (see: the 2023 revolt). Reddit has slowly introduced moderator tooling but has never paid moderators directly.
Each subreddit develops its own norms, inside jokes, and governance. r/WallStreetBets famously fueled the GameStop short squeeze (Jan 2021), demonstrating Reddit's ability to move markets. r/Place, a collaborative pixel art experiment, became a global cultural event run twice (2017, 2022).
Unlike Facebook or LinkedIn, Reddit users are pseudonymous. This produces more candid discourse — product reviews, health discussions, relationship advice — making Reddit content uniquely valuable for both AI training and search engines seeking "real" human perspectives.
| Issue | Status | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| API pricing / third-party app kill-off | Resolved (apps dead) | ◠Medium — lingering user resentment |
| Moderator revolt & forced replacements | Resolved (new mods installed) | ◠Medium — trust deficit |
| AI-generated content flooding | Ongoing | ◠High — 50% quality drop per Cornell study |
| Moderator political bias / censorship | Ongoing (UMich study) | ◠Medium — echo chamber concerns |
| User data sold for AI training | Active deals | ◠Medium — ethical/consent questions |
| Content moderation at scale | Ongoing | ◠High — volunteer model straining |
| Dependence on Google traffic | Structural | ◠High — algorithm change = traffic cliff |
| Stock valuation / overpricing | Market concern | ◠Medium — P/E stretched |
âš ï¸ Sentiment data is estimated based on aggregated community discussions and is not scientifically sampled. It reflects online conversation trends, not a representative survey.
Composite score across four intelligence pillars
(82 + 74 + 58 + 70) ÷ 4 = 71 · Methodology: CrowsEye Composite Intelligence Framework v3
Last Updated: March 22, 2026
Reddit's IPO success caught everyone off guard. The "front page of the internet" went public and actually delivered, with the stock more than tripling from its IPO price. AI data licensing deals with Google and OpenAI turned Reddit's messy, beautiful, human-generated content into a goldmine overnight. Turns out, authentic human opinions are valuable when every other platform is drowning in bot-generated slop.
But Reddit's growth story has cracks. The API revolt of 2023 destroyed the third-party app ecosystem and alienated power users — the exact people who make Reddit worth visiting. Moderation quality has declined, and the platform's attempts at AI search and ad monetization feel like they're optimizing for Wall Street, not the communities that built it.
Reddit occupies a unique position: it's the last major platform where real humans have real conversations. That's either an incredible moat or a ticking time bomb, depending on whether management can resist the urge to "optimize" it to death.