The free AI Reddit post generator built for founders
An AI Reddit post generator is a tool that writes a Reddit-ready draft from a short description of what you built. This one is free, needs no signup, and is tuned specifically for Reddit: it writes in the target subreddit’s voice, gives you several title options, and flags the things that get founder posts removed before you ever hit submit.
The difference from pasting a prompt into a generic chatbot is that this knows Reddit. It shapes the draft to the community you name, warns you about a link in the body or ad-speak in the title, and tells you where to post if you have not picked a subreddit yet. It writes the post. You still post it yourself, from your own account, with no automation involved.
Four things a generic AI writer will not do for you
Writes in the subreddit's voice
Name the subreddit you are aiming at and the draft picks up its tone, length, and format. A post shaped for r/SaaS reads differently than one shaped for r/smallbusiness, and the generator treats them differently instead of producing one flat template.
Gives you title options, not one guess
The title is the part of a Reddit post you cannot edit after posting, and it decides whether anyone reads the body. You get several title formats to choose from, each written the way a real member of that community would phrase it.
Flags removal risk before you post
It marks the common triggers that get founder posts pulled: a link in the body, ad-speak, a missing question, launch hype. You see the warnings while the draft is still editable, not after a mod removes it.
Tells you where and how to post
Leave the subreddit blank and it suggests the communities that fit your product instead of making you guess. It is closer to a posting coach than a text box, because getting the placement wrong wastes an otherwise good post.
Tuned for Reddit versus a general AI writer
You can absolutely write a Reddit post in ChatGPT. The gap is not raw writing ability, it is Reddit-specific knowledge: what a subreddit expects, which formatting gets filtered, and how a title has to read to get clicked. Here is where a dedicated tool pulls ahead.
| Dimension | Generic AI writer | Tuned for Reddit |
|---|---|---|
| Subreddit awareness | Writes generic text unless you describe the community in detail yourself | Shapes tone, length, and format to the named subreddit by default |
| Titles | Usually one headline, often in press-release voice | Several Reddit-native title options in the formats that actually get read |
| Removal risk | No idea your link-in-body post will get filtered until it happens | Flags link placement, ad-speak, and missing questions before you post |
| Ad-speak | Happily writes We are thrilled to announce | Built to sound like a member, not a marketer, and warns when it slips |
| Where to post | You still have to figure out the right community on your own | Suggests fitting subreddits when you have not picked one |
Want the long version? We break it down in Reddit Post Generator vs. ChatGPT.
Generate your first Reddit post now
Describe your product, name the subreddit you are aiming at, and get a title set, a full draft in that community's voice, and removal-risk flags in one pass. Free, no signup.
Title options
From blank box to postable draft in five steps
Describe what you built
Paste a sentence or two about your product, who it is for, and what you want the post to do. More context produces a sharper draft, but a rough description is enough to start.
Name the subreddit, or don't
If you know where you are posting, name it and the draft is tailored to that community. If you do not, leave it blank and let the generator suggest communities that fit.
Generate and compare
You get a title set and a full body draft, plus tone notes and removal-risk flags. Read the warnings first, since they point at the exact things a mod or filter would catch.
Edit in your own voice
Treat the output as a strong first draft, not a finished post. Swap in a real detail from your own experience, cut anything that still sounds like copy, and make the question at the end genuinely yours.
Post it yourself
Copy the draft into Reddit and post from your own account. Nothing is automated, so you stay in control of timing, placement, and every word that goes out.
The lines this tool does not cross
Most tools that promise Reddit growth are selling automation, bot accounts, or bought upvotes. Those are the exact behaviors that get you banned. This is a writing tool, and the boundaries are deliberate.
It does not auto-post or schedule
There is no automation and no botting. The tool writes the draft, you post it yourself from your own account. Automated posting is exactly the behavior that gets accounts banned, so it is not something we build.
It does not run bot accounts or buy upvotes
No sock-puppet accounts, no vote rings, no upvote purchases. Those tactics get posts and accounts actioned fast, and they poison a community's trust. The whole point is to earn attention with a genuinely good post.
It does not replace your judgment
It does not know your product the way you do, and it cannot read a subreddit's rules for you. The draft is a starting point you finish with a real detail and a final rules check, not a submit button.
Built for the founder doing their own distribution
Solo founders launching with no budget
You have time and a product but no ad spend. A good Reddit post is one of the few free distribution channels left, and the hard part is writing something that lands instead of getting removed.
Anyone who freezes at the blank Reddit box
You know your product cold but the empty title field is where it falls apart. Starting from a draft in the right voice is far easier than starting from nothing.
Founders who have been removed before
If your last launch post vanished, you are probably tripping a filter you cannot see. The removal-risk flags are built for exactly that, so you fix the trigger before the next attempt.
Reddit's daily active unique visitors as of Q4 2025, up 19% year over year, the scale of the free distribution channel a single well-placed post can reach.
View the Reddit usage data (Business of Apps)What a generated draft actually looks like
This is an illustrative example for a fictional product, aimed at r/SaaS, to show the shape of the output: a title set, a body that leads with the problem, and the risk flags attached.
1. I kept losing track of which invoices were overdue, so I built a tiny dashboard for it 2. After the third client who "forgot" to pay, I automated my follow-ups. Sharing what I learned. 3. Is there a simpler way to chase overdue invoices? Here is the version I ended up building.
Running a small agency, the part I dreaded most was chasing late invoices. I would send one polite reminder, feel weird sending a second, and then just eat the delay. Last quarter I finally sat down and built a small tool that tracks which invoices are overdue and drafts the follow-up for me so I stop avoiding it. It has already pulled in two payments I would have written off. I am curious how other solo founders handle this. Do you automate reminders, or is there a reason you keep it manual? Happy to share how I built it if that is useful.
What free gets you, and what Pro adds
Free
- Generate posts with a fair-use limit
- Full subreddit-tuned drafts and title sets
- Removal-risk flags on every draft
- No signup required
Pro, $5 a month or $30 a year
- Removes the fair-use generation limit
- Priority generation speed
- Everything in the free tier
- No free trial, cancel anytime
Most founders never hit the free limit. Pro exists for people generating drafts across many launches or subreddits in a single sitting.
The mistakes it catches before a mod does
What gets posts pulled
What it nudges you toward
Once you have a draft, run it against the full launch checklist so the account and timing are as ready as the writing.
See AI drafting Reddit content in action
AI Reddit post generator questions
Is the AI Reddit post generator actually free?
Yes. You can generate posts free with a fair-use limit and no signup. Pro removes the limit and adds priority speed for five dollars a month or thirty dollars a year, and there is no free trial. Most founders never hit the free limit.
Does it post to Reddit for me?
No. It writes the draft and you post it yourself from your own account. There is no auto-posting, no scheduling, and no botting. Automated posting is the behavior that gets accounts banned, so it is deliberately not part of the tool.
How is it different from just using ChatGPT?
It is tuned specifically for Reddit. It shapes the draft to the subreddit you name, gives you several Reddit-native title options, flags removal triggers like a link in the body or ad-speak, and suggests where to post. A generic chatbot writes text but does not know any of that.
Is it against Reddit's rules to use AI to write a post?
There is no site-wide ban on using AI to help you write, but individual subreddits set their own rules and some restrict AI-generated content. The point of a tool like this is to produce a draft you then edit into your own voice, not to paste raw output. We cover the subreddit-by-subreddit answer in a dedicated guide.
Will a generated post get removed by AutoMod?
It flags the common removal triggers so you can fix them before posting, but it cannot read a specific subreddit's rules for you. Always check the community's rules page against your finished draft, since AutoMod configs vary widely between subreddits.
Can it write comments too, or only posts?
This page is about full posts, but comment templates matter just as much for founders, since most of your early Reddit activity should be genuine comments. We have a separate comment generator and a guide on writing comments that do not sound like a bot.
Do I need a Reddit account to use it?
Not to generate a draft. You only need a Reddit account when you go to post what you wrote. The generator itself requires no signup on either side.
Should I post the output word for word?
No. Treat it as a strong first draft. Swap in a real detail from your own experience, cut anything that still reads like marketing copy, and make the closing question genuinely yours. The edit is what makes it sound human instead of generated.