With 16 gift requests posted every minute and real users answering them, Reddit is becoming a key engine for influencer-wary consumers
As we head into a holiday season where consumers are carrying inflation anxiety along with their shopping bags, fitness and wellness brands may be overlooking one of the most efficient places to spend hyper-targeted ad dollars: Reddit.
In an age of influencer-weary consumers, authenticity has become increasingly valuable. It’s the same realism now showing up in CrossFit and Orangetheory campaigns, where grit and truth reign over shortcuts and everyday members replace models.
On Reddit, shoppers ask what works, what doesn’t, how products compare and whether they’re worth the money long before clicking “add to cart.”
In a recent Reddit business webinar, presenters demonstrated just how research-driven holiday shopping has become, with consumers planning ahead and crowdsourcing product decisions through real experience.
During the session, presenters noted that Reddit sees an average of 16 gifting advice requests posted every minute, and each one receives around 14 personal responses with firsthand accounts from other users.
The social media platform, which went public last year, hosts countless subreddits dedicated to specific topics, and in the fitness and wellness realm, it’s no different. Users trade advice on fitness, nutrition, supplements, biohacking stacks, wearable tech, performance training and longevity science.
The reach even extends to brand-specific forums for brands like Whoop, Strava, Bevel and Bryan Johnson’s Blueprint protocol. In some cases, company executives have stepped into threads to answer questions directly or address concerns.
How To Win on Reddit
If Reddit is where decisions are happening, the next question is how fitness and wellness brands can lean in.
Presenters even noted that Reddit has seen examples of brands (from apps to workout products) build “small but mighty” cult followings, with some earning trust by engaging directly in comment threads.
The webinar presenters suggest brands “give more than they get,” framing Reddit not as a place for flashy offers but as a channel where ads should help shoppers make sense of their options.
Instead of blasting promotions, they encouraged marketers to build campaigns that add value to the browsing experience, then use Reddit’s business tools (including its targeting options and ads dashboard) to understand what drives meaningful action, not just clicks.
A separate report from Reddit and Webflow notes that roughly 40% of posts on Reddit are commercial, driven by users who come to “ask, compare, vet, validate” products through real experience.
Instead of polishing their message in isolation, marketers can monitor the conversations that already exist, whether it’s a glitch in a recovery device, a controversial ingredient in a supplement or a new wearable integration people are begging for.


