Reddit Video Replies: Post Faster, Engage More
Reddit video replies make threads more personal, visual, and engaging in public SFW communities.
Jun 3, 2026 (Updated Jun 3, 2026) - Written by Christian Tico
Reddit, Inc. © 2025. All rights reserved.
Christian Tico
Jun 3, 2026 (Updated Jun 3, 2026)
Reddit Begins Rolling Out Video Replies in Public, SFW Subreddits
Reddit is starting to test and expand video replies in public, safe-for-work subreddits, giving users a new way to answer posts with short videos. The rollout, which begins on June 11, adds a more visual and personal reply format to Reddit’s conversation threads.
What Video Replies Are
Video replies let users respond to posts with short-form video instead of only text. On Reddit, this means a reply can now include a quick filmed response that appears directly in the discussion, making answers more expressive and immediate.
- Format: Short video responses inside comment threads.
- Availability: Public, SFW subreddits.
- Purpose: Make replies more engaging and interactive.
Why Reddit Is Adding This Feature
Reddit has long been centered on text-based discussion, but video replies broaden how people participate. The feature is designed to make answering questions, reacting to posts, and sharing expertise feel more natural and personal.
For communities that thrive on advice, demonstrations, or quick explanations, video replies can create a richer discussion experience than text alone.
Where Video Replies Will Appear
The feature is rolling out in public and SFW subreddits, which means it is limited to communities that allow open participation and do not contain sensitive or adult content. This restriction helps keep the feature aligned with Reddit’s moderation and community standards.
- Public communities: Accessible to broader audiences.
- SFW communities: Safe-for-work spaces only.
- Excluded: Private or restricted contexts where video replies may not fit the same use case.
How This Could Change Reddit Conversations
Video replies could make Reddit threads feel more dynamic, especially in communities built around tutorials, troubleshooting, recommendations, and personal stories. Instead of typing a long response, users can show an object, demonstrate a process, or convey tone more clearly.
This may also encourage more participation from creators, experts, and brands that want to answer questions in a format that feels more human and less formal.
Potential Benefits for Users and Communities
The rollout could improve engagement in several ways:
- Clearer explanations: Complex answers can be shown more easily in video.
- More personality: Video adds tone, facial expression, and immediacy.
- Faster demonstrations: Useful for product examples, how-tos, and visual feedback.
- Higher engagement: A more expressive format may encourage more replies and discussion.
What It Means for Content Creators and Brands
For creators, video replies offer a new way to participate in Reddit without relying only on long text comments. For brands, the feature could be useful for customer support, product education, and community engagement, as long as the responses remain relevant and non-promotional.
Because Reddit users generally value authenticity, video replies will likely work best when they provide direct, useful answers rather than polished marketing messages.
Conclusion
Reddit’s rollout of video replies in public, SFW subreddits adds a more interactive layer to comment threads and gives users a faster, more personal way to respond. As the feature expands after June 11, it could reshape how people share advice, react to posts, and build discussions across the platform.
Video replies are less a feature upgrade than a format shift in who gets to be credible on Reddit: they reward performance, speed, and presence, which can amplify authentic expertise but also tilt discussions toward personalities that are easier to watch than to verify. In that sense, Reddit may be trading some of its text-first epistemic rigor for a more immediate kind of trust.
What is the purpose of adding video replies to Reddit?
