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I killed my $50/mo Reddit marketing stack and built a free local tool

Okay confession time.

For the last 6 months I've been paying roughly $50/month across different tools just to do Reddit marketing for my SaaS. Brand24 for monitoring. Some random Chrome extension for finding threads. A Fiverr guy who charged me per "research session" (don't ask).

And you know what? Most of it didn't even work half the time.

The monitoring tool kept missing threads. The Chrome extension broke every time Reddit updated their UI. And the Fiverr guy... well, he stopped replying after the third payment.

So last month I just said screw it. Cancelled everything. Built my own thing instead.

The actual problem I was trying to solve
Here's what I needed to do every day:

  1. Find fresh posts in my niche subreddits (like r/SaaS, r/startups, r/Entrepreneur)
  2. Filter out the ones with 50+ comments (too late to be seen)
  3. Read the post, write something actually helpful
  4. Not get banned

Simple right? Except every tool out there is either:

  • Cloud-based (so Reddit blocks their IPs within days)
  • Too expensive for what it does
  • Built for enterprise teams, not solo founders

I'm not paying $99/mo for "social listening" when I just need to find posts under 10 comments.

What I ended up building
Desktop app. Python + PyQt6. Runs on my laptop.

The key insight was stupid obvious in hindsight: if it runs from MY computer, Reddit sees MY home IP. Just a normal person browsing Reddit. No server IPs to block. No rotating proxies. No captcha hell.

Features I actually use every day:

  • Paste in 5 subreddit names, scrape the last 200 posts from each in like 10 seconds
  • Filter by comment count (I set max 8 comments)
  • Filter by score (tired of seeing downvoted rants)
  • Right-click any post → generate an AI reply draft (not to copy-paste, just to get started)

Whole workflow takes maybe 15 minutes now vs the hour+ it used to take.

The uncomfortable truth about Reddit marketing
Look, I'll be honest. Reddit marketing is mostly a numbers game.

You're not gonna convert every comment into a customer. Most of my replies get like 2 upvotes and nobody clicks through. That's fine.

What matters is consistency. Show up every day. Be genuinely helpful. Occasionally mention your product when it's actually relevant (not in every single comment, come on).

The tool just removes the friction. I'm not scrolling through garbage posts anymore. I'm not manually tracking which subreddits I've already checked today. I'm not getting blocked because some server in AWS is making 1000 requests per minute.

It's boring work made slightly less boring. That's it.

Sharing it for free (with limits)
I cleaned it up and put it out there. Called it Reddit Toolbox - https://wappkit.com

Free tier does 15 scrapes a day. That's honestly enough for most indie hackers - you're not commenting on 500 posts daily anyway.

Premium is for people who want unlimited + CSV export + all the AI stuff. Nothing crazy expensive.

If you're doing Reddit marketing and tired of paying for cloud tools that keep getting blocked... yeah. Maybe give it a shot. Search "Reddit Toolbox wappkit" or check wappkit.com.

What's next
Honestly? Not sure. The tool does what I need. Might add keyword monitoring at some point - like get notified when someone mentions "my niche" in any subreddit. But that's future me's problem.

For now I'm just happy I stopped bleeding $50/mo on tools that barely worked.

Happy to answer questions about the stack, the approach, or why Reddit marketing is both amazing and terrible at the same time.

on December 19, 2025
  1. 1

    This hits home.

    The real cost isn’t the $50/mo — it’s the daily friction and babysitting tools that almost work. Your “runs on my own machine = normal human IP” insight is spot on. Cloud Reddit tools always felt like they were fighting a losing battle.

    Also appreciate the honesty about Reddit marketing itself. It’s not magic — it’s consistency, relevance, and restraint. Tools should reduce scrolling, not promise conversions.

    Nice write-up. Thanks for sharing the thinking behind it.

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