For twenty years, Reddit was the internet’s messy archive of human arguments. You had to dig through hundreds of comments, dodge bad puns, and parse sarcasm to find a consensus. That era is ending. The company is now betting its business on an AI that reads the threads for you and serves up the bottom line, fundamentally changing the site from a place where you read discussions to a place where you just get answers.
Key Takeaways
- Weekly active search users grew 30% to 80 million over the past year.
- AI-powered Reddit Answers users increased from 1 million to 15 million during 2025.
- Non-ad revenue reached $140 million for 2025, a 22% year-over-year increase.
Reddit’s leadership confirmed this week that they are merging their traditional search bar with their new AI-powered “Reddit Answers.” The goal is to stop sending you to a list of links and start giving you a synthesized response. CEO Steve Huffman argues that for most questions, this generated approach is simply better than the old way.
The numbers suggest users agree. The AI feature grew from 1 million users to 15 million in just one year. While traditional search is still useful for navigation—finding a specific community or thread—the company believes the future lies in summarizing the “questions that have no answers,” where the truth is a mix of fifty different opinions.
The big deal
This matters because it changes the primary function of one of the web’s last remaining human-centric platforms. People often add the word “reddit” to their Google searches because they want to hear from real humans, not SEO-optimized blogs. Reddit is now trying to automate that human element. Instead of reading the raw data (the comments), you are reading a machine’s interpretation of that data.
There is also a significant financial shift happening here. Reddit is no longer just selling ad space on a forum; it is selling the intelligence of its user base. The company’s “other” revenue, which includes selling data to train AI models, hit $140 million in 2025. By turning its own search into an answer engine, Reddit positions itself to compete directly with Google and Perplexity, rather than just feeding them content.
How it works
The new system uses AI to scan relevant discussions across the site and compile a summary of the consensus.
Think of a crowded dinner party where everyone is shouting about the best pizza in town. Traditional search is like walking around the room, listening to snippets of twenty different conversations to figure out the general mood. Reddit’s AI is the host who pulls you aside, summarizes what everyone is arguing about, and tells you which pizza place most people seem to prefer.
Instead of making you read the individual arguments, the software weighs the perspectives and presents a unified answer. Reddit is also working to make these answers “media-rich,” meaning the AI won’t just give you text, but likely images and videos pulled from the threads.
The catch
The biggest tradeoff here is privacy and anonymity. Reddit plans to remove the distinction between logged-in and logged-out users by late 2026. The goal is to use AI to personalize the site for everyone, regardless of whether they have an account. If you used to browse Reddit privately without logging in to avoid tracking or personalization, that window is closing.
There is also a revenue gap. While the company calls AI search an “enormous market,” they admit it is not monetized yet. Running AI models is expensive, and currently, this new search product does not generate direct cash flow the way traditional ads do. They have to figure out how to make money from the answers without ruining the utility.
What now?
Expect the search bar on Reddit to change rapidly over the next few months. The company is already piloting “dynamic agents” and merging the AI results with standard results, so you will see fewer lists of threads and more direct summaries. They are also rolling out support for five new languages.
If you rely on Reddit for unbiased, raw human feedback, pay attention to how often the AI summary matches the actual comments below it. The next big milestone to watch is Q3 2026, when the new personalization rules for logged-out users kick in.













