New Reddit accounts face a specific challenge: many communities impose minimum karma or account age requirements that prevent very new accounts from posting or commenting, and the penalty for hitting these restrictions can be disorienting for someone still figuring out the platform. Fortunately, several resources specifically exist to help new users find accessible communities. The primary resource is r/NewToReddit itself, which maintains a wiki index and a dedicated list of new-user-friendly subreddits at a linked page within the wiki. This curated list, maintained by the community's moderators, identifies subreddits that are known to have low or no minimum requirements for posting and that have cultures welcoming to first-time contributors. According to guidance shared within r/NewToReddit, examples include r/ask, r/casual, r/NoStupidQuestions, r/learnprogramming, and r/AmItheAsshole, among many others depending on your interests. The sister community r/LearnToReddit is specifically designed as a practice space where new users can test posting, commenting, and formatting features without the social pressure of a real-audience community. It functions as a sandbox for learning Reddit mechanics before engaging in communities where mistakes have social consequences. r/findareddit is the broader community discovery resource — posting there with a description of your interests and mentioning that you are new will reliably generate suggestions from experienced users who can point you toward welcoming spaces. Many hobby and interest communities also explicitly welcome beginners regardless of account age, particularly topic-specific communities around sports teams, television shows, and creative hobbies where enthusiasm matters more than Reddit tenure. Building your initial karma in these accessible spaces is a practical prerequisite for accessing more restricted communities later — Reddit's system rewards consistent good-faith participation, and even a modest karma total of a few hundred points opens doors to communities that would otherwise block new account submissions automatically. The goal in your first weeks is not to find the perfect community immediately but to establish a track record that qualifies you for a wider range of communities over time.
Knowledge Base entry
Where can completely new Reddit users find "new-user-friendly" communities?
A practical answer page built from the knowledge base source.
FAQ
Imported article
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