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reddit killed my first account and taught me exactly what NOT to do (expensive lessons learned)

hey indie hackers

gonna share something embarrassing

my first reddit account got permanently banned

not shadowbanned

not temporarily suspended

permanently nuked

all because i didn't understand one simple thing:

reddit tracks PATTERNS, not individual posts

let me explain what happened and what i learned

how it started

launched my first SaaS product (before redchecker)

read all the growth hacking articles

"reddit is free traffic!"

"just provide value and mention your product!"

"authenticity wins!"

sounds easy right?

week 1: the honeymoon phase

what i did:

created fresh reddit account

waited 3 days (articles said to age the account)

posted in r/Entrepreneur

first post:

title: "Launched my productivity app! Would love feedback"

content: described features, asked for users

link to landing page

result:

removed within 2 hours

"rule 2: no self-promotion"

okay fine, i thought

let me try again with better framing

week 2: trying to be smarter

what i did:

rewrote the same post

added more "value"

described the PROBLEM before the solution

mentioned product at the end

second post:

title: "Struggling with productivity? Here's what I built"

content: talked about productivity challenges, then introduced my solution

result:

stayed up for 6 hours

got 12 upvotes

then removed

"rule 2: no self-promotion"

my reaction:

frustrated but determined

clearly i need to provide MORE value first

week 3: the value-first approach

what i did:

wrote a comprehensive guide

"10 productivity tips that actually work"

genuinely helpful content

mentioned my tool briefly at the end

"built a tool that automates #7 if anyone's interested"

result:

87 upvotes!

34 comments!

driving traffic!

thought i cracked the code

this is working!

week 4: scaling what works

what i did:

wrote 5 more posts in similar format

helpful content + brief product mention

posted in different subreddits

r/productivity, r/SaaS, r/startups, r/smallbusiness

all within 7 days

result:

first 2 posts: good engagement

post 3: removed after 4 hours

post 4: removed after 1 hour

post 5: posted but getting zero visibility

something was wrong

week 5: the ban

logged in one day

"your account has been permanently suspended"

reason:

"repeated violation of reddit's spam policy"

what i could do:

appeal (denied)

nothing else

account gone

all karma gone

all posts gone

all comments gone

i was devastated

spent a month building that account

felt like starting over

but worse, because now i was IP-flagged

what i didn't understand (the expensive lesson)

here's what killed my account:

not the individual posts

each post was helpful

each provided value

each followed subreddit rules

but the PATTERN across posts:

every single post mentioned the same product

even briefly

even at the end

even after providing value

reddit's spam detection saw:

user joins → posts about product A

posts again → mentions product A

posts again → mentions product A

posts again → mentions product A

posts again → mentions product A

pattern = spam

doesn't matter if each individual post is valuable

the account-level pattern is promotional

the patterns reddit tracks (that nobody tells you)

after losing my account, i researched obsessively

talked to mods

analyzed banned accounts

here's what triggers bans:

pattern 1: single-product focus

what triggers it:

80%+ of your posts mention the same product/service/website

why it's bad:

you're not a community member

you're a promoter with one agenda

how reddit detects it:

scans your post history

calculates % of posts mentioning same domain/product

above threshold = flag

the threshold:

from what i've found: 60-70%

if 7 out of 10 posts mention your product

you're flagged

even if posts are helpful

how to avoid:

the 10:1 rule people mention?

that's 10 comments per 1 promotional post

better rule: the diversity principle

post about 5 different topics

only 1 of them mentions your product

example:

10 posts total:

  • 2 about productivity (mention your tool)

  • 2 about marketing (no product mention)

  • 2 about founder journey (no product mention)

  • 2 about tools you use (mention others' tools)

  • 2 answering community questions

now only 20% of posts mention your product

safe zone

pattern 2: rapid cross-posting

what triggers it:

posting same/similar content across multiple subreddits quickly

my mistake:

wrote good post

posted in r/Entrepreneur (monday 9am)

posted in r/startups (monday 10am)

posted in r/SaaS (monday 11am)

posted in r/smallbusiness (monday 2pm)

reddit saw:

same user

same day

4 subreddits

similar content

= spam pattern

the detection:

reddit compares post content

doesn't need to be identical

similar topics + same links = flagged

timeframe that triggers:

posting in 3+ subreddits within 24 hours

posting in 5+ subreddits within 72 hours

how to avoid:

spread posts over time

safe pattern:

monday: post in subreddit A

wednesday: post adapted version in subreddit B

friday: post adapted version in subreddit C

next week: continue

or even better:

write completely different posts for different subreddits

pattern 3: comment-then-link pattern

what this looks like:

find posts asking "what tool do you use for X?"

comment: "i use [your tool], it's great because..."

repeat 10 times across different posts

why people do this:

seems helpful

answering genuine questions

providing recommendations

why it gets you banned:

reddit tracks link patterns in comments

if you comment the same domain repeatedly

= spam pattern

my mistake:

found 15 posts asking about productivity tools

commented on all of them mentioning my tool

within 3 days

all comments removed

account flagged

the threshold:

linking same domain in 5+ comments in short timeframe

especially in different subreddits

how to avoid:

participate in discussions without linking

when someone asks for tool recommendations:

describe the approach/solution

let them ask for specifics

then share link if they request

example:

bad:

"try ProductX [link], it does Y and Z"

good:

"i use a tool that automatically does Y by Z method. happy to share if you want"

if they reply asking, THEN share link

pattern 4: new account, immediate promotion

what this looks like:

create account

wait 3-7 days

start posting about your product

why it gets flagged:

reddit tracks account creation date

compares to first promotional activity

new account + immediate promotion = obvious spam

my mistake on second attempt:

created new account after first ban

waited 1 week

started posting about redchecker

flagged within 2 weeks

the actual timeframe needed:

reddit expects 30-60 days of genuine participation

before any self-promotion

how to do this right:

weeks 1-4:

only comment

help people

ask questions

build karma

weeks 5-8:

start posting

but NOT about your product

share other people's resources

ask discussion questions

contribute to community

weeks 9+:

now you can occasionally mention your product

in context

when relevant

pattern 5: link-to-karma ratio

what reddit tracks:

how many of your posts/comments contain links

vs how many are pure discussion

the flag threshold:

if 50%+ of your activity contains links

you're promotional

my pattern (that got me banned):

20 posts total

14 contained links (to my site, landing page, tool)

6 were pure discussion

70% link rate = flagged

healthy ratio:

10-20% of posts contain links

80-90% are pure text discussion

how to achieve this:

post 10 helpful things

only 1-2 contain links

the rest are:

  • answering questions

  • sharing insights

  • discussing topics

  • asking community input

pattern 6: engagement manipulation

what this is:

coordinating upvotes/comments

even innocently

my mistake:

posted something

shared in founder slack

"hey posted on reddit, would love your thoughts"

5 founders went and upvoted

reddit detected:

5 accounts from similar IPs

upvoted within 10 minutes

= vote manipulation

all accounts flagged

mine banned

how reddit detects:

tracks IP addresses

tracks voting patterns

identifies coordinated activity

even if innocent:

asking friends/team to check out your post

if they upvote from same office/wifi

= pattern detected

how to avoid:

never ask for upvotes

never share links asking for engagement

let it grow organically

if people find it and upvote, great

but don't coordinate it

the permanent consequences

what permanent ban means:

account gone forever

all karma lost

all posts deleted

all comments removed

but worse:

IP address flagged

email flagged

browser fingerprint tracked

creating new account:

possible but risky

reddit tracks:

  • IP address

  • browser fingerprint

  • posting patterns

  • writing style

if new account looks similar to banned account

= banned again

what i had to do:

different email

different IP (VPN)

completely different posting pattern

waited 2 months before creating new account

started from zero

the second account (learning from mistakes)

approach:

complete opposite of first account

month 1:

only commented

never posted

focused on being helpful

built 200 karma

month 2:

started posting

but NOT about redchecker

shared resources about:

  • reddit marketing (no product mention)

  • founder challenges

  • marketing strategies

  • productivity tips

month 3:

occasionally mentioned redchecker

but only when contextually relevant

1 out of every 5-6 posts

result:

account healthy

never flagged

never banned

still using it today

what the mods told me

reached out to several subreddit mods

asked about spam detection

mod from r/Entrepreneur:

"we see this pattern constantly. founder joins, posts helpful content but always mentions their product. even if content is good, the pattern is promotional. we ban accounts like this weekly."

mod from r/startups:

"reddit's spam filter is smarter than people think. it's not looking at individual posts. it's looking at account behavior over time. dedicated promotional accounts get caught."

mod from r/SaaS:

"best accounts are ones that contribute to multiple discussions, share variety of resources, and occasionally happen to mention their own product. that's authentic. accounts that always circle back to one product, even subtly, are promotional."

the actual rules (learned the hard way)

rule 1: diversity is safety

post about 10 different topics

only 1-2 mention your product

rule 2: time is trust

wait 60+ days before any self-promotion

build genuine participation first

rule 3: ratio matters

90% helpful content

10% or less self-promotional

rule 4: spread it out

never post same product multiple times per week

once every 2 weeks maximum

rule 5: different subreddits = different content

don't cross-post rapidly

adapt and space out

rule 6: engagement is organic or nothing

never coordinate upvotes

never ask for engagement

let it happen naturally

what i do now with redchecker

my posting pattern:

2 posts about reddit marketing (educational, no product mention)

share frameworks, data, insights

1 post about founder challenges (no product mention)

discuss journey, lessons learned

1 post about tools/resources (mention multiple tools, including redchecker)

honest comparison, redchecker is one option

1 post answering community questions (no product mention)

genuine help, no agenda

maybe 1 post specifically about redchecker

but framed as case study or lessons learned

total: 6 posts, only 1-2 mention redchecker

safe pattern

the cost of learning this

first account ban:

lost 400 karma

lost 30 posts

lost all comments

lost reputation

second account attempt:

banned in 2 weeks

learned vpn/fingerprinting matters

third account (current):

started from zero

took 3 months to establish trust

now healthy and growing

total time lost: 5 months

could have avoided if i knew these patterns upfront

what i built into redchecker

these painful lessons became features:

feature 1: account health monitor

tracks your posting patterns

warns if you're trending toward spam pattern

shows % of posts mentioning your product

feature 2: diversity checker

analyzes your post history

recommends topic diversification

suggests safe posting frequency

feature 3: cross-posting scheduler

prevents rapid cross-posting

recommends safe spacing

tracks subreddit overlap

feature 4: pattern risk score

calculates your account's risk level

based on posting patterns

suggests corrections before ban

if your account is flagged (warning signs)

sign 1: posts auto-removed immediately

used to go live, now removed instantly

= account flagged

sign 2: low visibility despite normal metrics

posting but getting 0-2 upvotes consistently

= shadow suppression

sign 3: comments not showing

you see your comment

others don't

= shadow filtered

sign 4: mod messages increasing

getting more removal messages

= account under scrutiny

what to do:

stop posting about your product immediately

spend 2-4 weeks only commenting helpfully

rebuild trust

if already banned, start fresh carefully

questions for you

1. have you had account issues?

banned, shadowbanned, or flagged?

2. what % of your posts mention your product?

honestly track this

might be higher than you think

3. are you tracking these patterns?

or just posting and hoping?

the honest truth

losing my first account sucked

felt like wasting a month of work

but taught me more than any guide

you can't hack reddit

you can only work with its rules

the rules are pattern-based

understand the patterns

avoid the triggers

build sustainable presence

if you want help avoiding my mistakes

built all this into redchecker:

  • account health monitoring

  • pattern risk detection

  • posting frequency recommendations

  • diversity tracking

lifetime deal: $59 (ending soon)

monthly: code "IN26" for 50% off

redchecker.io

final thought

reddit doesn't ban you for one post

it bans you for patterns across posts

you might think you're being helpful

but if every helpful post mentions your product

that's still a promotional pattern

diversify your content

space out your mentions

think long-term account health

not short-term promotion

learn from my expensive mistakes

-musha

posted to Icon for redchecker.io
redchecker.io
  1. 1

    This is actually one of the clearest breakdowns I’ve seen on how Reddit really works.

    I learned a smaller version of this the hard way too — not banned, but I started noticing my posts getting less visibility when I kept circling back to the same topic.

    The “pattern over individual posts” point really explains that.

    Curious though — once you fixed the pattern, did you notice conversions improve as well, or just account health and reach?

    1. 1

      hey mate ,yes the conversions improve well

      my saas got a new update , redchecker.io !

  2. 1

    The pattern detection insight is spot on. Most founders think each post is evaluated in isolation but Reddit's anti-spam is all about account-level behavioral analysis. The 60-70% threshold for single-product mentions is a good rule of thumb.

    One thing I'd add from my own experience: the IP/fingerprint tracking goes deeper than people realize. If you're working from a coworking space and someone else there got banned, your new account can inherit that suspicion. VPNs help but even those shared IPs can be flagged.

    The 10:1 rule is outdated honestly. Your diversity principle is much more practical advice. It's not about ratios, it's about looking like a real person with diverse interests who occasionally talks about their product.

  3. 1

    yeah exactly, patience is the part most people skip. everyone wants to drop their link day one and wonder why they get nuked lol. the 2 weeks lurking thing is real, same applies to pretty much any community tbh not just reddit. did you have to rebuild from scratch after getting banned or did you manage to recover the original account?

    1. 1

      yes mate fr ! i rebuilt this from scratch

      do checkout redchecker.io , its updated and its ready to be used , it might be helpful for you

  4. 1

    Been through this exact pain. Reddit is brutal with new accounts — one wrong move and you're shadowbanned. The key I've found: spend 2 weeks just adding genuine value in comments before even thinking about posting your own stuff. No links, no promotion, just helpful answers. Build karma organically. Then when you do post something with a link, the community already recognizes your name. Patience is the cheat code on Reddit.

    1. 1

      yes true mate !

      do checkout redchecker.io