Reddit Ads have a 5 dollar per day minimum, which is the number every guide leads with and the number that matters least. The real cost of Reddit Ads in 2026 is approximately 0.20 to 2.00 dollars per click and 3 to 12 dollars per thousand impressions, with narrow B2B and SaaS audiences pushing the click price toward 3 dollars. But the honest answer to "how much do Reddit ads cost" is not a CPC. It is the budget you need to learn something real, and the decision of whether a paid test even beats seeding those same subreddits organically. This post gives you both: a real dollar breakdown, sourced from Reddit's own auction rules and independent benchmarks, and the paid-versus-organic call that the organic-only Reddit agencies will not write down.
Most Reddit Ads guides stop at a CPC range and a screenshot of the setup screen. That is the easy half, and it is also the half that will not save you money. The expensive mistakes on Reddit are almost never about the bid. They are about spending too little to learn anything, pointing paid traffic at an offer that has not been proven, over-narrowing your targeting on day one, or reaching for ads when the real bottleneck is that nobody wants the product yet. So this breakdown does two jobs. First it gives you the numbers, the CPC and CPM ranges, the minimums, and the objective and platform comparisons, all cited to real sources. Then it gives you the decision framework we actually use with clients, because knowing that a click costs 60 cents is useless if you are buying the wrong clicks.
About these numbers
The cost figures below come from Reddit's own ad platform, independent 2025 to 2026 industry benchmark compilations, eMarketer reporting on Reddit's ROAS and spend growth, and real spend diaries that founders and marketers published on the Reddit marketing blog and X, each cited inline and verified live. Auction pricing means your number will differ from anyone else's: methodology, targeting, and competition all move it. Treat every figure here as a directional benchmark, and read the FORKOFF context as what we see running paid and organic Reddit together through our Reddit marketing service, not as a universal guarantee.
How much do Reddit ads actually cost in 2026?
Reddit Ads are priced by auction, so there is no rate card, but the working ranges are well established. Most campaigns see a cost per click between 0.20 and 2.00 dollars and a cost per thousand impressions between 3 and 12 dollars, consistent with Statista's tracking of Reddit CPC by ad format. Video views run cheaper, around 0.10 to 0.50 dollars each. The 5 dollar per day floor and the bidding model are set out in Reddit's own help center, but that floor is a technical minimum, not a plan: to give Reddit's delivery enough data to optimize, most operators run 50 to 100 dollars per day, and to read a real signal you want roughly 1,000 to 3,000 dollars over two to four weeks. The headline numbers sit in one table below.
Where you land inside those ranges depends mostly on three things: how competitive your target communities are, what objective you optimize for, and how native your creative feels. A brand buying broad awareness in low-competition communities can see CPCs at the very bottom of the range or below, while a SaaS company chasing conversions in a handful of contested professional subreddits can sit at the top. Reddit's own reporting frames the platform as unusually efficient for its size, which is consistent with the sub-dollar CPCs operators keep publishing, but efficiency at the click level says nothing about efficiency at the conversion level. That gap, between a cheap click and a paying customer, is the entire game, and it is why the rest of this post spends more time on the decision than on the decimal. Real operators report the low end constantly: one SaaS builder logged a 0.42 dollar cost per video view running meme creative, a reminder that the cheap-click reputation is earned.
Memes actually converted better on Reddit than traditional ads. Campaign #1: $7.14 spent, 17 views, $0.42 CPV.
Reddit Ads cost at a glance (2026)
| Metric | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CPC (cost per click) | 0.20 to 2.00 dollars | Up to 3 dollars on narrow B2B or SaaS targeting |
| CPM (per 1,000 impressions) | 3 to 12 dollars | Awareness placements sit at the low end |
| CPV (cost per video view) | roughly 0.10 to 0.50 dollars | One operator reported 0.42 dollars per view |
| Minimum daily budget | 5 dollars per day | A platform floor, not a recommendation |
| Recommended daily for signal | 50 to 100 dollars per day | Gives the algorithm enough data to optimize |
| Realistic test budget | 1,000 to 3,000 dollars | Spread over 2 to 4 weeks to read real signal |
Those ranges are wide for a reason, and the reason is the auction. Reddit runs a second-price system, so you pay just above the next-highest competing bid rather than your maximum, which means your real CPC is set by how contested your target subreddits are, not by a published price. A tiny test in a low-competition niche can come in absurdly cheap. One indie founder reported a 0.13 euro CPC on a 23 euro test, which is the kind of number that makes Reddit look like free money. Another founder building in public logged a 0.92 dollar CPC after switching to meme-style creative. Both numbers are real, and both are correct for their auction, which is the point: there is no single Reddit CPC, only your CPC in your subreddits on your day.
Raphaël Sorel
@raph_sorel
Spent €23 on Reddit ads to test my idea. €0.13 CPC ✅ Here's what worked, what didn't, and what happened:
Reddit runs a second-price auction with a 5 dollar daily floor
Reddit's ad platform is an auction, not a rate card. You set a daily budget (the platform minimum is 5 dollars per day) and a bid, and Reddit runs a second-price auction, so you pay just above the next-highest competing bid rather than your full maximum. You can be billed on CPC (cost per click), CPM (cost per thousand impressions), or CPV (cost per view for video). Because it is an auction, your real cost is set less by a published price and more by how contested your target subreddits are, your objective, and how well your creative earns clicks. That is why two advertisers on the same day can see wildly different CPCs.
Source: Reddit Ads documentation, business.reddit.com
It also helps to know how Reddit can bill you, because the billing model changes what "cost" even means. You can pay on a CPC basis, where you are charged per click and impressions are free, which suits traffic and conversion goals. You can pay on a CPM basis, where you are charged per thousand impressions regardless of clicks, which suits pure awareness. And you can pay on a CPV basis for video, where you are charged per view. Most performance-minded founders run CPC, because it ties spend directly to the action they care about, but a brand running a launch splash might deliberately buy CPM to maximize reach. Pick the billing model that matches the outcome you are actually buying, not the one with the lowest headline number.
Cost also climbs with intent. Awareness and reach placements are the cheapest per impression, traffic campaigns cost more per click, and conversion-optimized campaigns and narrow B2B targeting cost the most. The pattern is consistent enough to plan around: the closer your objective sits to the bottom of the funnel, the more you pay for each action, because you are asking Reddit's delivery to find a rarer, higher-value person. A founder who budgets as if an awareness CPM and a conversion CPC are the same number will always be surprised by the invoice.
On the impression side, CPM follows the same logic. A standard feed placement is cheapest, conversation ads that sit inside a thread cost a little more, and a tightly targeted audience in a competitive subreddit costs the most per thousand impressions. If your goal is genuinely top of funnel reach, Reddit is one of the cheaper large platforms to buy, which is a large part of why its share of tech ad budgets has climbed so fast. Seasonality moves these numbers too: benchmark compilations note that CPMs on the most in-demand subreddits have been rising year over year as more advertisers arrive, so a cost you measured a year ago is not the cost you will pay today.
What actually drives your Reddit CPC?
Five levers set the price you pay, and only one of them is your bid. The first is the auction bid itself: bidding to value keeps you from overpaying to win every impression. The second is your objective, because awareness is cheaper than conversion. The third is targeting width, since broad subreddit and interest targeting keeps CPC down while tight targeting bids it up fast for a thinner audience. The fourth is creative click-through rate: native, on-topic creative earns clicks and lowers effective CPC, while an ad that reads like an ad gets ignored and costs more. The fifth is competition, meaning how many other advertisers want the same subreddits and dayparts.
Operator noteStart broad on targeting. Tight subreddit and interest targeting bids your CPC up fast for a thinner audience., FORKOFF Reddit marketing desk
This is why creative format matters more on Reddit than on most platforms. One SaaS builder found that meme-style creative converted better than traditional ads and reported a 0.42 dollar cost per view, which is the format lesson in a single data point: on Reddit, the ad that looks least like an ad usually costs the least and converts the most. Reddit gives you several ad formats to work with, and each has its own cost profile. Feed ads look like a normal post in the feed and are the workhorse. Conversation ads place your ad inside the comment stream of a thread and read as more native. Free-form and carousel formats let you tell a longer story, and video ads bill on views. The formats that respect how Redditors actually read, plain, useful, and community-aware, consistently earn a higher click-through rate, and because CTR feeds back into the auction, better creative directly lowers your effective cost.
Madat
@madat_ai
Reddit people love memes! Just launched Campaign #2 in Reddit ads using memes. Based on my past experience, memes actually converted better on Reddit than traditional ads. About Campaign #1 (launched yesterday): - $7.14 spent - 17 views - $0.42 CPV
Targeting is the other big cost lever, and Reddit gives you three main ways to aim. You can target specific communities, choosing the exact subreddits your buyers already read. You can target by interest, letting Reddit group relevant communities for you. And you can target by keyword, showing ads against posts and searches that contain terms you pick. Community targeting is the sharpest and the most Reddit-native, but it is also where costs rise fastest if you stack too many narrow, high-demand subreddits. A common and expensive mistake is to over-narrow on day one, targeting five tight subreddits with a small budget, which starves the algorithm of data and bids up your CPC at the same time. Start broader than feels comfortable, let the data show you which communities convert, and only then tighten.
It helps to know what a healthy and an unhealthy CPC actually look like in context. A CPC that starts high and falls over the first week is usually fine, because it means Reddit is learning and your creative is earning clicks. A CPC that stays high while your click-through rate stays low is a creative problem, not a bid problem, and raising the bid only makes it worse. A CPC that is suspiciously cheap paired with a bounce rate near 100 percent is the most dangerous pattern of all, because it looks like a win in the ad dashboard while it quietly burns money, which is exactly what the 1,002-dollar campaign felt like right up until the founder checked the sign-up count. Read cost and quality together, never cost alone.
What does a real Reddit Ads test actually cost?
A real test is not 200 dollars over a weekend. It is enough spend, over enough time, to separate signal from noise. In practice that means running 50 to 100 dollars per day for two to four weeks, which lands you at roughly 1,000 to 3,000 dollars for a first readable result. Below that, you are looking at delivery that never optimized and a sample too small to trust either way. The math is not arbitrary. If your landing page converts at a healthy 2 to 3 percent and you need a few dozen conversions to trust the number, you need thousands of clicks, and at a 0.50 to 1.00 dollar CPC that is squarely in the 1,000 to 3,000 dollar range. Anyone who tells you they proved or disproved Reddit on 150 dollars proved nothing.
Operator noteDo not judge Reddit Ads on 200 dollars. Budget 1,000 to 3,000 dollars over 2 to 4 weeks, or you are reading noise, not signal., FORKOFF Reddit marketing desk
The step-by-step version is simple, and the order matters: set a daily budget above the 5 dollar floor, enter the auction with a value-based bid, choose the objective that matches your actual goal, and then buy enough clicks to read a signal rather than a rumor. Structure the test in two phases. In the first week, run broad with two or three creative angles and a handful of communities, optimize for clicks or traffic, and let Reddit gather data. In the second phase, cut the angles and subreddits that are clearly losing, shift the objective toward conversions, and concentrate budget on what is working. Judge the test on cost per qualified action, a sign-up, a trial, a booked call, not on impressions or even raw clicks, because cheap clicks that never convert are the trap this entire post is built to help you avoid.
None of this works without measurement, and measurement is where most Reddit tests quietly break. Before you spend a dollar, install conversion tracking, connect your key events, whether that is a sign-up, a purchase, or a lead form, and confirm the events actually fire with a test conversion. If you only ever look at Reddit's in-dashboard click and impression counts, you are grading the channel on the metrics that always look good and ignoring the one that decides whether it worked. Pair the pixel with a UTM convention so the traffic shows up cleanly in your own analytics, and reconcile the two, because platform-reported conversions and your own numbers rarely match exactly. The founders who conclude Reddit does not work are very often the founders who never wired up the tracking to see the conversions it did produce.
Real operator diaries put honest numbers on this. A game developer walked through a 3,594 euro Reddit Ads spend and openly weighed whether it was worth it, which is exactly the right question to ask at that budget. Game and app developers are a useful group to learn from here, because they run Reddit Ads at real scale toward a clear, measurable action, a wishlist or an install, and they publish the receipts. One developer spent to earn 3,600 wishlists and documented the full process. The lesson across these diaries is consistent: Reddit can deliver volume affordably, but only when the offer, the creative, and the landing experience are dialed in first.
I Spent €3,594 on Reddit Ads for My Indie Game (Was it Worth it?)
I spent money on getting 3600 wishlists thru Reddit Ads for my game Danchi Days. Was it worth it? Should you run ads?
And the cautionary case is the most important one to internalize. A founder spent 1,002 dollars, got 328,000 impressions and 1,296 clicks, and converted zero sign-ups. The clicks were cheap. The offer and the landing page were the problem. This is the failure mode that no amount of bid tuning fixes. Notice what actually happened: the auction worked, the delivery worked, the creative earned clicks at a reasonable rate. Everything Reddit controls performed. What failed was everything the advertiser controlled, the strength of the offer and the relevance of the destination. That is why we treat a zero-conversion Reddit test as a diagnosis of the funnel, not a verdict on the channel.
I spent $1,002 on Reddit Ads. I got 328k impressions, 1,296 clicks, and exactly 0 sign-ups. Here is the harsh truth about cold traffic.
Cheap clicks are not conversions, especially from cold Reddit traffic
The failure mode is buying cheap clicks that never convert. A founder in r/founder documented spending 1,002 dollars for 328,000 impressions and 1,296 clicks that produced exactly zero sign-ups, and titled the post about the harsh truth of cold traffic. This is the single most common Reddit Ads mistake: pointing paid traffic at an unproven offer or a slow, generic landing page. Redditors are ad-skeptical by default, so an ad that reads like an ad, landing on a page that reads like a pitch, converts poorly no matter how low the CPC. Prove the offer first, then buy traffic.
Source: r/founder spend post-mortem, verified via redditapis
When does paid Reddit beat organic seeding, and when does it not?
This is the decision the organic-only Reddit agencies avoid, because their answer is always "seed organically." The honest answer is that paid and organic win on different axes. Paid Reddit Ads give you speed to data in days, a spend you control, and retargeting, which makes them ideal once you have a proven offer and want fast validation or scale. Organic seeding is slower and depends on operator skill rather than budget, but it earns trust with a skeptical audience and it compounds, because native comments keep ranking in Google and getting cited by AI engines long after any ad budget stops. The matrix makes the tradeoff explicit.
Operator noteAds amplify a proven offer, they do not create demand. Cold traffic to an unproven page is how you get 1,296 clicks and zero sign-ups., FORKOFF paid + organic field notes, 2026
Put plainly: choose paid when the offer already converts somewhere, the landing page is fast and native, tracking is live, and you want speed or retargeting. Choose organic seeding when you are still finding the message, when trust is the bottleneck, or when you want a durable presence in the threads your buyers read. If you have not proven demand at all, neither is your first move, because ads just buy expensive silence and seeding an untested message wastes the same skilled hours. Our own Reddit lead-gen without getting banned and the Reddit intent engine playbooks go deep on the organic side of this call.
A few concrete scenarios make the call obvious. If you are launching a consumer app with a clear install action and a landing experience that already converts warm traffic, paid is the faster route to volume, and Reddit's low CPV on video makes it attractive. If you sell a considered B2B product where buyers spend weeks researching in a few niche subreddits, organic seeding almost always comes first, because a trusted, sourced comment in the exact thread a buyer reads outperforms an ad they scroll past, and it keeps working for months. If you are pre-product-market-fit and still guessing at your message, spend nothing on ads yet, use organic comments as the cheapest possible message test, and only reach for paid once a specific angle is visibly landing. And if you are an established brand that already knows what converts, the highest-return move is often to seed and amplify at the same time, using ads to put reach behind the exact organic message that is already earning replies. The clearest paid-wins case is a product with a single concrete action to buy, like an app install or a game wishlist, where the conversion is cheap and countable.
melos han-tani
@han_tani
OK my reddit ads post is HERE!! I spent money on getting 3600 wishlists thru Reddit Ads for my game Danchi Days. Was it worth it? Should you run ads?? Read to find out + a lot of explanation of my experience with the process if you want to get started!
The flip side is the cold-traffic case, where the same spend against an unproven offer converts nobody, which is why the decision has to be made honestly and per stage rather than by default.
I spent $1,002 on Reddit Ads. I got 328k impressions, 1,296 clicks, and exactly 0 sign-ups.
Before you spend a dollar, run the five-check scorecard. If you cannot answer all five with a green light, fix that first: an unproven offer, a slow landing page, or missing conversion tracking will waste any budget you put behind it.
There is one more honest caveat worth stating: the paid-versus-organic call is rarely permanent. A pre-product-market-fit startup that should not touch ads today can become an obvious paid candidate three months later once organic proves the message, and a brand that leans entirely on ads can be leaving durable citations on the table by ignoring the organic layer. Revisit the decision every quarter as your offer, tracking, and community presence mature. If you want a second opinion on where you sit right now, our Reddit marketing service exists to make exactly that call, and the wider Founder Funnel covers the case where distribution, not ad budget, is what is actually holding growth back.
The play that beats either one alone: paid plus organic together
The reason we run both is that they feed each other. Organic seeding is the cheapest possible way to discover which angle and which subreddit actually convert, because you are testing messages with real comments instead of paying to guess. Once organic tells you what works, paid amplification puts budget behind a message that is already proven, which is how you avoid the 1,002-dollars-for-zero-signups outcome. The workflow is four steps, and the ad budget only enters after organic has done the discovery.
In practice, this changes the economics of the whole channel. When you seed first, your paid creative is not a guess, it is the exact comment framing that already earned upvotes and replies, so your click-through rate starts high and your CPC starts low. When you seed first, you also already know which subreddits contain your buyers, so your community targeting is informed rather than speculative, which is precisely the targeting decision that moves cost the most. And when you seed first, the organic comments keep accruing value in the background, ranking in search and getting pulled into AI answers, so even the portion of your effort that is not paid keeps compounding. A team that only buys ads restarts discovery every campaign. A team that seeds and then amplifies compounds it.
Operator noteSeed organically to find the message that converts, then put ad budget only behind the winners. Either alone leaves money on the table., FORKOFF paid + organic field notes, 2026
For a first paid test off the back of organic learning, we split the budget rather than dumping it into one campaign: a portion to keep testing creative and subreddits, the majority to scale the messages that are already winning, and a slice to retarget the users who engaged. It is a starting model, not a law, but it keeps a first test from becoming a single expensive bet. Retargeting deserves special mention, because it is where Reddit ad spend tends to earn its best return. People who already clicked a link, visited your page, or engaged with a seeded thread are warm, and showing them a follow-up ad converts far more efficiently than chasing cold impressions. If your total budget is tight, weight it toward retargeting the warm audience your organic work created, and treat cold prospecting as the smaller, more experimental slice. That single reallocation, from cold reach toward warm retargeting, is often the difference between a Reddit test that reads as a failure and the same budget reading as a modest win.
This is also where Reddit quietly pays a second dividend. The same on-topic comments you seed to win buyers are the comments that Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, and Perplexity increasingly quote, a shift that has made Reddit a top AI citation source. Independent studies have measured it: Wikipedia and Reddit now drive over a quarter of ChatGPT citations, Reddit is among the most cited sources across AI search engines, and the trend is driven in part by Reddit's data-licensing deals with Google and OpenAI. That is why we tie Reddit work to our answer engine optimization, GEO, and LLM SEO programs. A paid click is gone the moment the budget stops. A cited Reddit thread keeps working. If your category is AI-heavy, the Reddit stack for AI startups goes deeper on this.
Reddit Ads versus other platforms: the cost-per-click reality
Reddit's pitch is efficiency, and the benchmarks back it up. Independent 2025 to 2026 compilations put Reddit CPC below Meta and far below LinkedIn for comparable B2B targeting, while Google Search captures higher-intent demand at a higher click price. eMarketer reported that Reddit's share of tech ad spend surged 58 percent since 2023 and that consumer tech marketers saw a reported 7 dollar ROAS, and Reddit's own Q3 2025 results filing shows advertising revenue still compounding, which is why more media plans now carry a Reddit line. The comparison grid lays out where each platform actually fits.
Reddit is cheap per click and posted a reported 7 dollar ROAS for consumer tech
The reason Reddit keeps showing up on media plans is efficiency. eMarketer reported that Reddit helped consumer tech marketers reach roughly a 7 dollar ROAS between the first quarter of 2023 and the first quarter of 2025, and that Reddit's share of tech ad spend surged 58 percent since 2023, outpacing other paid-social platforms. Independent benchmark compilations put Reddit CPCs meaningfully below Meta and far below LinkedIn for comparable B2B targeting. For a founder, the takeaway is that the raw click is cheap. The open question is whether those clicks convert for your specific offer.
Source: eMarketer, Reddit outpaces peers in tech ad spend and ROAS
The nuance the raw CPC hides is intent. A cheap Reddit click from someone researching a category is worth less than an expensive Google click from someone ready to buy, and worth more than a LinkedIn impression that never gets read. The cross-platform operators who spend at scale understand this, which is why the most useful benchmark is not the cheapest click but the blended picture across channels. Reddit's role in that blend is usually upper and middle funnel: it reaches people who are actively researching a category in communities they trust, earlier than Google Search captures them and in a more considered context than a broad Meta interruption. That makes Reddit an excellent complement to search rather than a replacement for it. You use Reddit to enter the consideration set inside the discussion, and you let Google Search capture the demand once it turns into a query.
For B2B and SaaS specifically, the case for Reddit is strongest exactly where LinkedIn is most expensive. LinkedIn's precise job targeting is powerful but its clicks routinely cost five to nine dollars, while the same buyer is often discussing your category in a niche subreddit at a fraction of that cost per click. The catch is that Reddit will not hand you a job title, so you reach the B2B buyer through the communities they read rather than the role they hold. That is why the highest-performing B2B Reddit programs almost always pair paid with organic: the organic layer identifies the exact threads and language that resonate, and paid amplifies into them, turning Reddit's lower cost per click into a genuinely lower cost per qualified lead.
I spent $173K on LinkedIn, Meta, Reddit, and Google Ads for B2B. Here's what worked for me
I spent $173K on LinkedIn, Meta, Reddit, and Google Ads for B2B. Here's what worked for me.
For a first setup, watching a real run end to end helps calibrate expectations before you commit budget.
Do Reddit Ads Actually Work? I Ran a $100 Experiment (Full Results)
HubSpot Marketing
A 100 dollar Reddit Ads experiment run end to end, showing what a small real budget actually buys in impressions and clicks.
Cost per click by platform (2025-26 benchmark ranges)
| Platform | Typical CPC | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| 0.20 to 2.00 dollars | Niche, high-context communities | |
| Meta (Facebook, Instagram) | 0.50 to 3.50 dollars | Broad consumer reach |
| Google Search | 2 to 4 dollars | Active, high-intent demand |
| 5 to 9 dollars | Precise B2B job targeting |
Do Reddit Ads Work in 2026? Real Results + Setup Tips
Jamie Stenton - Digital Marketing Expert
A 2026 walkthrough of whether Reddit Ads work, with setup tips and real results to set expectations before you spend.
The verdict: what Reddit Ads actually cost, and when to spend
Reddit Ads cost about 0.20 to 2.00 dollars per click and 3 to 12 dollars per thousand impressions, on a second-price auction with a 5 dollar daily floor. To learn anything real, budget 1,000 to 3,000 dollars over two to four weeks. Those are cheap clicks by any cross-platform standard, and Reddit's reported consumer-tech ROAS is genuinely strong. But cost per click is the wrong headline. The right question is whether you have a proven offer to amplify, and whether a paid test beats seeding the same subreddits organically for your stage.
If you take one thing from this breakdown, make it the sequence, not the CPC. Prove the offer somewhere first, even organically, so you are not paying to discover that nobody wants it. Get the tracking and the landing page right, so you are measuring conversions and not just Reddit's click counter. Then run a real test, 1,000 to 3,000 dollars over a few weeks, broad at first and tightened by data, judged on cost per qualified action. Do that and Reddit's cheap clicks turn into cheap pipeline. Skip it and Reddit's cheap clicks turn into an expensive lesson, exactly like the 1,002 dollars that bought 328,000 impressions and nothing else. Paid wins for speed, control, and retargeting once demand is proven. Organic wins for trust and for a presence that compounds and gets cited after the budget stops. The teams that get the most out of Reddit stop treating it as a choice and run both, letting organic find the message and paid scale it. If you want that run as one program, with the honest call on where each dollar goes, that is exactly what we do. You can also compare the organic Reddit playbook for B2B founders and the best subreddits for B2B SaaS, or pair Reddit with Twitter marketing and KOL distribution for a fuller paid-plus-organic mix. When you are ready, book a Reddit ads and seeding strategy call.
How to Run Reddit Ads in 2026 (Step-by-Step Guide)
ZoCo Marketing
A step-by-step 2026 guide to running Reddit Ads, useful for seeing where budget and bid settings actually live in the auction.
Spent €23 on Reddit ads to test my idea. €0.13 CPC.
















