This is a timeline of Reddit, an entertainment, social networking, and news website where registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links, making it essentially an online bulletin board system.
Major events
Time period
Key developments at Reddit
2005
Reddit's creators help seed Reddit with numerous fake accounts to make Reddit seem more populated than it actually was.[1]
2006
Apart from "reddit.com", "NSFW" is the most popular subreddit at the beginning of 2006. "Programming" becomes the second most popular subreddit for most of the year. Then by the end of the year, subreddit "science" gets launched and soon becomes the third most popular subreddit.[2]
2007
For most of the year, "science" and "programming" are the most popular subreddits (apart from "reddit.com"). They then get displaced by "politics" as the most popular non-"reddit.com" subreddit towards the end of the year.[2]
2008
This year is dominated by the launch of numerous new subreddits. By the end of the year (except for a short-lived blip following the 2008 presidential election), not one subreddit (not even "reddit.com") would capture more than 50% of Reddit's attention. From the beginning of 2008 (to at least the end of 2012), there is a continual exponential increase in the number of unique subreddits people submitted to each week.[2]
mid-2010
Due to a controversial redesign brought on by Digg, disgruntled users declared a "Quit Digg" day where they posted links to Reddit and left Digg behind to join Reddit. Reddit subsequently overtook Digg in search popularity.
2010–2012
From the beginning to the end of 2010 (and following Reddit's move to Amazon AWS servers in November 2009), Reddit more than triples in pageviews and bandwidth count.[3] By February 2011,[4] Reddit reached 1 billion page-views per month. Within a year (by January 2012), Reddit again doubled in pageviews and reached 2 billion pageviews per month.[5]
2012–2014
Reddit achieves 37 billion pageviews in 2012, 56 billion pageviews in 2013, and 71.25 billion pageviews in 2014. Yishan Wong serves as Reddit's CEO from March 2012 to November 2014. Wong is replaced by Ellen Pao in November 2014. By September 2014, Reddit raises $50 million in funding in a Series B round, and makes its first app acquisition in October 2014.
2014–2016
On July 10, 2015, Pao resigned as CEO and was replaced by Reddit cofounder Steve Huffman.
2020
On June 5, 2020, Ohanian resigned from the board and planned to be replaced "by a Black candidate". The orange colour of the site emblem was changed to black for few months.[6][7]
One of the most popular subreddits, "IAmA" (I Am A), is created. Many famous people would proceed to participate in AMAs (Ask Me Anything) from the community.[18]
Reddit outsourced the Reddit search engine to Flaptor, who used its search product IndexTank.[25]
2011
June 20
Community
Alexander Rhodes creates the NoFap subreddit, r/NoFap.[26]
2011
September
Company
Reddit becomes operationally independent of Condé Nast. Reddit is now free to hire a CEO, pick out an ad sales team and figure out its own route to profitability.[27][28]
2011
October
Community
The jailbait subreddit comes to wider attention outside Reddit when Anderson Cooper condemned the subreddit and criticizes Reddit for hosting it. Following this negative news coverage (and the actual posting of the image of an underage girl), Reddit closes "jailbait".[29]
2011
October
Community
Reddit closes "/r/reddit.com" and expands its number of default subreddits to 20.[30]
The Reddit serial killer hoax is perpetrated by class members of "Lying about the past", a course taught at George Mason University by T. Mills Kelly. The hoax – about an alleged serial killer named Joseph Scafe – is first debunked in just over an hour after being launched on Reddit.[35][36]
2012
August
Community, Publicity
Barack Obama does an AmA on Reddit. The increased traffic shut down much of the site.[37][38]
2013
April
Community, Publicity
Members of subreddit "findbostonbombers" wrongly identify a number of people as suspects in the Boston Bombings, including a missing Brown University student.[39]
2014
January 8
Community
Mother Jones publishes a story describing the sale of guns on the site. The report suggests that sellers are doing so to exploit a loophole in U.S. federal law.[40] Nearly 100 AR-15s were engraved with the Reddit logo as part of licensing deal made with the page in 2011.[41]
2014
January
Community
American chemist Nathan Allen begins the /r/science AMA series with the goal of raising the visibility of scientists who are producing groundbreaking work in their fields but who are not well known outside of their fields.[42][43]
2014
February
Company
Reddit announces it will donate 10% of its annual ad revenue to non-profits voted among by its users.[44]
2014
June
Community
The "beatingwomen" subreddit is closed by Reddit administrators. The community, which featured graphic depictions of violence against women, is banned after its moderators are found to be sharing users' personal information online, and collaborating to protect one another from sitewide bans. Following the ban, the community's founder would reboot the subreddit under the name "beatingwomen2" in an attempt to circumvent the ban.[45][46]
2014
July 23
Product
Reddit Live is launched.[47] In 2016, users form the 'Volunteer Live Team' to provide live threads on ongoing news events.[48]
2014
July 31
Community
Ben Eisenkop's Reddit account Unidan is banned from Reddit for using alternate (or "sockpuppet") accounts to upvote his own posts and downvote posts by other users that were either attracting attention away from his own or downvote posts from people he was arguing with.[49][50][51]
2014
August
Publicity
Reddit users begin sharing a large number of naked celebrity photos on the subreddit "TheFappening" in the 2014 celebrity pictures hack. Reddit closes TheFappening a month later.[52]
2014
September
Company
Reddit raises $50 million in funding in a Series B round, led by Sam Altman. Also participating in the round: Peter Thiel, Ron Conway, Paul Buchheit, Jared Leto, Jessica Livingston, Kevin and Julia Hartz, Mariam Naficy, Josh Kushner, Snoop Dogg, and Yishan Wong. Reddit plans its own cryptocurrency to give back to the community (later known as "reddit notes").[53][54]
2014
September
Product
An official mobile application for browsing AMA (Ask Me Anything) threads is released for the iOS and Android platforms under the name Ask me Anything.[55]
2014
October
Company
Reddit acquires Alien Blue as its first official mobile app.[56]
Reddit bans five subreddits, citing an anti-harassment policy.[63][64] The largest of the banned subreddits, "fatpeoplehate," had an estimated 151,000 subscribers at the times of its banning.[63] The other four subreddits are "hamplanethatred," "transfags," "neofag," and "shitniggerssay."[63]
2015
June–July
Team
Reddit bans multiple subreddits and fires Victoria Taylor, the site's director of talent, who has served on the Reddit team since 2013. Taylor served as a liaison between the moderators of specific subreddits (such as IAmA) and Reddit itself, helping organize and verify interviewees for Reddit's user-led "AmA" sessions. As a result of this and other frustrations with Reddit—such as its moderation tools and its new conduct under Pao—numerous subreddits (such as IAmA, todayilearned, pics and science) temporarily shut themselves down in protest.[65] Subsequently, to these and other recent events a petition asking Pao to step down as CEO reaches over 160,000 signatures.[66] On July 10, 2015, Pao resigns and is replaced by cofounder Steve Huffman as CEO.[67]
Reddit launches Upvoted, a news site that digs out interesting content from reddit, but without enabling commenting.[69]
2015
December 15
Product
Reddit announces that it is shutting down reddit.tv.[70]
2016
April
Product
In April 2016, Reddit launches a new blocking tool in an attempt to curb online harassment. The tool allows a user to hide posts and comments from selected redditors in addition to blocking private messages from those redditors.[71] The option to block a redditor is done by clicking a button in the inbox.
2016
June
Product
Standalone image hosting service implemented. Previously, Reddit users primarily relied on Imgur for sharing pictures, screenshots, and graphics.[72]
2017
February
Community
Reddit bans the "altright" subreddit for violating its terms of service, more specifically for attempting to share personal information about the man who attacked alt-right figure Richard Spencer.[73][74] The forum's users and moderators accuse Reddit administrators of having political motivations for the ban.[75][76]
2017
April
Community
Place, another site-wide social experiment, is put into practice.[77]
2017
May 31
Community
Reddit stops using default subreddits, centering its new discovery-oriented r/popular landing page.[78]
Reddit announces that its main code repositories, backing its desktop and mobile websites, are no longer open source.[80][81]
2018
April
Product
Reddit announces the rollout of a new design for the site and its logo Snoo.[82][83]
2019
August
Product
Reddit announces RPAN (Reddit Public Access Network) in August. The official subreddit is r/pan.
2020
June 5
Team
In response to the George Floyd protests, Reddit announces a plan to revise its content policy to combat hate and racism on the site. Alexis Ohanian resigns from the Reddit board of directors and plans to be replaced "by a Black candidate".[6]
2020
June 29
Community
Reddit updates its content policy to bar "hate based on identity or vulnerability" and bans some 2000 subreddits, including the long-controversial r/The_Donald.[84]
2020
December 13
Company
Reddit acquires Dubsmash. They intend to integrate its video creation tools into Reddit.[85]
2023
Company
Reddit moves its headquarters from 455 Market Street to 303 Second Street, both of which are located in San Francisco.[86]
2023
June–July
Product
Reddit announced new changes to its API pricing, effective July 1, that will force many third-party apps to shut down. In response, on June 12, thousands of subreddits went private in protest of the decision; some for two days, and others indefinitely.[87] After over 7,000 subreddits went private, Reddit experienced outages at approximately 07:58 Pacific Daylight Time on June 12 (14:58 UTC) credited to a "significant number of subreddits shifting to private".[88][89][90][91]
One of Reddit's most popular subreddits, r/WhitePeopleTwitter, was banned for 72 hours for allegedly threatening to dox and murder DOGE developers.[93][94]FBI and other law enforcement agencies are investigating the threats.[95]
2025
June 4
Product
Redditors can hide their post and comment histories from public view. If hidden, the history is only visible to the redditor themselves and moderators of communities the user has interacted with during the last four weeks.[96]