Reddit is piloting an AI-powered shopping search that turns community chatter into shoppable results, showing product carousels with prices, images, and direct purchase links to a small group of users in the U.S. The experiment blends Reddit’s trademark discussion threads with a lightweight storefront, aiming to help people move from “What do real users recommend?” to “Where can I buy it?” in a single flow.
Early testers will see interactive carousels on queries such as “best noise-canceling headphones” or “electronic gift ideas for a college student.” The items are drawn from products mentioned in posts and comments, then matched to retailers via Reddit’s shopping and advertising partners. Tap a product to view more details, then jump to the seller to check out.

How the New Search Experience Works for Shopping
The feature surfaces products that real users have actually discussed, not a generic catalog. In effect, the AI tries to translate messy conversation—brands, models, and attributes scattered across threads—into structured listings people can act on. That reduces the friction of copying a model number into a separate tab and hunting for a legitimate offer.
Reddit says the tool keeps community perspective at the center. That means the carousel anchors to posts and comments where products were vetted in context—why a headphone’s clamp force matters for long sessions, or how a robot vacuum handles pet hair. The goal is not just to show options, but to bring forward options that were upvoted, debated, and pressure-tested by enthusiasts.
This test builds on Reddit’s growing commerce stack, including its Dynamic Product Ads, which use interest signals to recommend items. The new search layer goes a step further: it doesn’t merely infer interests; it harvests explicit product mentions and aligns them with real-time intent expressed in a search query.
Why It Matters for Reddit and Brands in Commerce
Reddit’s leadership has framed AI search as both a product bet and a business opportunity. According to the company, weekly active users for Reddit search grew 30% year over year, from 60 million to 80 million. Its AI-powered Reddit Answers feature also scaled quickly, moving from roughly 1 million weekly users in the first quarter to 15 million by the fourth quarter. If even a fraction of those sessions start converting to product clicks, the upside for ad revenue and partner spend is meaningful.
For marketers, the draw is authenticity at scale. User-generated recommendations often outperform polished brand copy when shoppers are in research mode. McKinsey has reported that effective personalization can lift revenue by 10%–15%, and this format is inherently personalized: it anchors to the exact products and attributes people are already debating in niche communities.
If Reddit can consistently connect “high-intent query + credible community endorsement” to a retailer link, brands get a cleaner funnel from discovery to checkout. Expect early traction in categories that over-index on enthusiast research—audio gear, PC components, home fitness, skincare actives—where Reddit threads already function like living buyer’s guides.

The Competitive Landscape for AI-Driven Shopping Search
Social platforms have been folding commerce into content for years. TikTok and Instagram tightly couple short-form video with native shopping, and conversational AI is edging in as well—ChatGPT recently introduced an Instant Checkout flow for select Etsy and Shopify listings. Reddit’s angle is different: long-form, community-authenticated advice that feeds an intent-aware search layer.
Search incumbents won’t ignore this, either. Product queries that start on Reddit siphon away high-value traffic. If the test proves that “Reddit-first” shopping reliably beats generic comparison sites for satisfaction and conversion, we could see platforms race to license or synthesize community signals in their own results.
Trust and Transparency Will Be Crucial for User Adoption
Blending organic recommendations with commercial links raises familiar questions. Clear labeling—what’s algorithmically surfaced from community mentions, what’s sponsored, and when affiliate economics apply—will determine whether users embrace or ignore the carousel. Reddit’s advantage is credibility; it can’t afford to blur the line between a top comment and a paid placement.
There’s also the quality challenge. Community picks can be brilliant, but they can also reflect hype cycles, brigading, or outdated advice. The AI must down-rank low-signal threads, detect astroturfed recommendations, and keep models fresh as new products land. Expect Reddit to iterate on signals like upvotes, recency, subreddit expertise, and comment depth to keep results honest.
What to Watch Next as Reddit Pilots AI Shopping Search
Key indicators will be click-through rates from carousels, save and share behavior, retailer conversion, and whether users stick with Reddit for end-to-end shopping research. Expansion beyond the initial U.S. test group, category coverage, and more granular filters—price bands, fit notes, or use-case tags—would signal confidence.
If successful, Reddit won’t just add shopping to search; it could redefine how AI curates community knowledge into purchase-ready guidance. For millions of shoppers who already start with “What does Reddit think?”, the answer might soon come with a buy button attached.
