Reddit marketing · r/webdev

How to market on r/webdev without getting banned

Web developers and freelancers building for clients and themselves. Technical builders and agency devs — relevant for dev-tool and API-first products, and for developers who freelance and need to market. Here's how to show up there the right way — and how FounderReply helps you do it on your own account, through Reddit's official API, with a human approving every word.

Your own account · official Reddit API · human-approved · no scraping, no bots

~3M
members (approx.)
moderate
self-promotion tolerance
Official API only
your account, never a bot or proxy

Moderate — disclosed, in-context promotion tolerated. Member counts are indicative and change over time.

Know the rules

The rules that matter on r/webdev

Showing what you built is welcome in the "Showoff Saturday" thread; standalone promo elsewhere is removed.

  • Use Showoff Saturday for project promotion.
  • Lead with the technical story, not the marketing.
  • No "hire me" or agency spam in normal threads.
  • Engage technically with feedback.

Subreddit rules change — always read the current sidebar rules before posting. This is guidance, not a guarantee.

The play

How to actually win on r/webdev

Developers reward technical honesty. If your product is API-first, post the interesting engineering decision and let people discover the product through it. The weekly showoff thread is your linkable moment.

Built to stay on the safe side

We don't do the things that get you banned

Reddit's 2025 spam crackdown removed roughly 70% of automated posting accounts, and tools that auto-post or operate "managed" accounts are exactly what it targets. FounderReply takes the opposite approach by design.

Your own account, official API

It acts as you through Reddit’s official API — never a scraper, fake persona, or rented account.

Human approval by default

Every draft waits in your queue. Growth comments on others’ threads are hard-capped to require approval.

Value-first, 90/10 by design

It surfaces threads where you can genuinely help and drafts useful contributions — promotion stays the exception.

ToS guardrails enforced

Per-platform automation caps mean the agent can never be set looser than Reddit’s policy allows.

r/webdev marketing — FAQ

Can I promote my product on r/webdev?
Showing what you built is welcome in the "Showoff Saturday" thread; standalone promo elsewhere is removed. The safest approach: Developers reward technical honesty. If your product is API-first, post the interesting engineering decision and let people discover the product through it. The weekly showoff thread is your linkable moment.
Will I get banned for marketing on r/webdev?
You get banned for spamming, not for participating. The fast ways to get removed or shadowbanned are posting promotional content outside the allowed threads, using new or multiple accounts to push links, and posting at bot-like intervals. FounderReply does none of those: it acts on your own connected account through Reddit's official API, drafts genuinely useful contributions, and keeps a human approval step on by default — so what goes out is something you'd be comfortable posting yourself.
Does FounderReply auto-post to r/webdev?
No — not unless you explicitly allow it, and even then growth comments on other people's threads are hard-capped to require approval. By default every draft waits in your queue for a one-tap yes. We never operate fake or "managed" accounts on your behalf; it is always your account, via the official API.
What's the 90/10 rule on Reddit?
Reddit's widely-cited self-promotion norm is that no more than ~10% of your activity should be promotional — the other 90% should be genuine participation. FounderReply is built around that ratio: it surfaces threads where you can genuinely help and drafts value-first contributions, so your promotional mentions stay the exception, not the pattern.

Show up on r/webdev the right way.

FounderReply finds the threads worth replying to and drafts a genuinely useful contribution in your voice. You approve every word. It's your account, the official API, and no spam.