Free Tool

Subreddit Link Finder

Find relevant subreddits where links appear to work in posts, comments, or both. This tool combines subreddit relevance with public rule analysis and conservative live evidence checks.

Enter a keyword set to find communities where links appear to work in posts or comments.

About the Subreddit Link Finder

Subreddit Link Finder shows which subreddits actually allow links in posts and comments — separate from which subs claim to in their rules. Combines public ruleset analysis with conservative live evidence checks (looking at whether top recent posts/comments contain non-removed links). The shortlist saves you from posting into AutoMod-eat-everything subs.

How to use it

  1. Enter keywords matching your product or niche.
  2. Click Find. We surface subreddits with link-tolerance evidence.
  3. Review each sub's link-context score (post links, comment links, or both).
  4. Cross-check the top 3 against the actual subreddit rules before posting.

Why this matters for Reddit marketing

Most subreddits' AutoMod removes any post or comment with a URL — silently, with no notification. Even subs whose written rules permit links often have stricter filters in practice. This tool tells you where links are realistically tolerated based on what's actually surviving in the sub right now, not what the rules theoretically permit.

Common mistakes

  • Trusting a sub's stated rules without checking AutoMod behavior.
  • Spamming links in a link-tolerant sub — tolerance ≠ welcome.
  • Linking to your own domain in a brand-new account. Aged accounts have more leeway.

Want this automated?

RedSeed AI does this and more — on autopilot. It finds the right conversations, drafts genuine replies, and posts from your own connected Reddit account (or an invited teammate's). You approve every draft. No bans.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How is this different from a normal subreddit finder?+
A normal subreddit finder only answers relevance: where the audience exists. This tool adds a second layer: whether links seem workable in posts, comments, or both. It uses public subreddit rules plus conservative checks for surviving linked content, so it focuses on communities that are both relevant and more likely to tolerate links in practice.
Does this guarantee my link will not be removed?+
No. Reddit moderation depends on context, account quality, wording, karma, timing, and subreddit-specific rules. This tool looks for strong public signals that links are tolerated, but it does not guarantee that every future post or comment with a link will survive.
Why do some results say unclear?+
Because the tool is designed to be conservative. If the public rules are silent and the live sample does not show enough surviving link evidence, it returns unclear instead of guessing. That lowers false positives and makes the results more trustworthy.
What is the difference between allowed and tolerated in practice?+
Allowed means the public rules or subreddit metadata explicitly support links for that channel. Tolerated in practice means the tool found repeated surviving examples of linked content even though the rules were silent or incomplete. In other words: allowed is written policy, tolerated in practice is observed behavior.