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Awesome Healthtech & Wellness Subreddits Awesome

The communities where health buyers want peer proof and lived experience, where supplement marketers and MLM coaches have spent a decade poisoning the well for legitimate brands, and where the right sub for your audience may be one your media plan never considered. Curated for VPs of Marketing at health, wellness, supplement, fitness app, nutrition, mental health, and telehealth brands.

About this list. Maintained by Soar. We sell Reddit accounts and run engagement campaigns for B2B and consumer brands, so we have direct skin in the game on what works in these communities. The commentary on mod culture, removal rates, and what gets banned comes from running real campaigns across hundreds of subreddits, not desk research.

We don't link to product pages from inside the list. Every recommendation stands on its own. Verify it against your own posting and tell us if our read is wrong: open an issue.


Contents


Who this list is for

You run marketing at a health, wellness, fitness app, supplement, nutrition, mental-health, or telehealth brand. You've heard Reddit might work for your category. You've also seen the wave of GLP-1 telehealth marketers getting nuked from r/loseit and the ADHD community publicly calling out wellness apps. You'd like to understand which subs are realistic targets, which are listening-only, and which are ethically off-limits regardless of what the rules technically allow.

The honest top-line truth, which the rest of this list backs up: of the 8 subs in the canonical health-vertical shortlist, only r/bodybuilding and r/keto have any organic posting upside for legitimate healthtech brands. The other six are listening-only or paid-Reddit-Ads-only audiences. The largest opportunity for healthtech marketers on Reddit is not posting in the canonical fitness and nutrition subs at all; it's the chronic-illness, skin, and condition-specific subs we cover in considered, used with restraint and clinical credibility.


How we picked these eight

A subreddit had to clear all four bars to land here:

  • Real health-buying audience. Not just adjacent (general motivation, lifestyle), but communities where people actually research and recommend supplements, apps, services, or programs for specific goals.
  • Mod stance documented with rule-level specifics. What gets removed, what survives, what the famous incidents have been.
  • Survives the editorial honesty test. If our honest answer is "skip this sub for organic, use Reddit Ads only," we say so.
  • Ethically defensible to recommend. Mental-health crisis subs and chronic-illness diagnosis-support subs are explicitly excluded because the harm cost of recommending them outweighs the marketing utility, regardless of audience size.

We're keeping parity with the verticals shipped on soar.sh/subreddits/best-for/healthtech, where the same shortlist is enriched with brand-mention data from ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews citations. The list here is editorial; the live page is data-augmented.

Order is by realistic marketing fit. The two subs with limited promotional upside come first; the listening-only subs come later.


The MLM and supplement context you need to know

Before reading the per-sub entries, understand the cultural inheritance every sub on this list is reacting to.

Beachbody (which formally ended its MLM model in October 2024 per Athletech News), Pruvit, Plexus, ItWorks, Isagenix, Arbonne, doTERRA, Young Living, and the entire wellness-MLM cohort spent a decade flooding fitness, keto, weight-loss, and mom-focused subs with coach posts, transformation photos, and "DM me!" messaging. Subreddit mod teams reacted with the rules you see today: zero-tolerance self-promotion, watermark restrictions on progress photos, affiliate-link bans, bans on "shared experience" posts that double as testimonials.

A legitimate healthtech brand with a real product is downstream of a decade of distrust they did not create. Pruvit alone has been the subject of Truth In Advertising regulatory complaints, UK ASA rulings, and a petrochemical-flavoring lawsuit. r/xxketo explicitly bans "MLM or pyramid structure product advertisements." r/keto enforces the same in spirit through its self-promotion rule. You will be measured against this baseline whether or not your product is anything like Pruvit.

The implication: any product that smells even adjacent to MLM (multi-tier affiliate program, "coach" certification model, "share the love" referral codes) is uniquely toxic to every sub on this list. If your compensation plan looks like Beachbody's, mods will treat you as Beachbody.


The shortlist

r/Fitness

~12.5M subscribers · reddit.com/r/Fitness

The largest fitness sub on Reddit and 26th-largest sub overall (per Inverse). The entire moderation philosophy is encoded in two pinned rules: "Read the Rules Before Posting" and "Read the Wiki Before Posting," both linking to thefitness.wiki.

Why it matters for healthtech. As a posting destination, almost nothing. As a research and listening surface, valuable. The wiki references Examine.com as the canonical supplement-evidence source; if your supplement isn't in Examine's positive evidence column, the sub will assume it's a shill. Programmatic mentions in the Daily Simple Questions thread occasionally surface specific products users find useful (creatine SKUs, evidence-based protein, measurement tools), but brand voice is removed within minutes. Influencer Marketing Hub's framing captures the dynamic: "Communities like r/SkincareAddiction, r/Fitness, and r/Eczema don't hand out credibility easily."

How to post here without getting removed. The wiki flags Rules 0, 2, and 5 as the most-frequent removal triggers: posts answered by the wiki, posts not specific to physical fitness with useful discussion, and any question related to injury, pain, or medical topics. Rule 8 is "No Self Promotion or Surveys of Any Kind." The sub funnels almost all individual user questions into a single Daily Simple Questions Thread, which means standalone product or app posts get nuked on sight. Rule 6 is literally titled "Moderators Have the Final Word," and per the wiki: "moderation is ultimately subjective." Reddit Ads targeted to r/Fitness work better than organic posting for any branded message.


r/loseit

~4.2M subscribers · reddit.com/r/loseit

Famously welcoming community ethos: "A place for people of all sizes to discuss healthy and sustainable methods of weight loss." Founded 2010. The original viral driver was its before-and-after culture (per Daily Dot's 2014 interview).

Why it matters for healthtech. Two surprising rules make this sub fundamentally different from what a GLP-1 telehealth marketer would expect:

No Standalone Weight Loss Medication Posts. This includes (but is not limited to) Ozempic, Mounjaro, Wegovy, Zepbound and Phentermine. No sharing names of medspas, online pharmacies, comparing prices, or other 'how to's on obtaining meds.

No Promoting or Encouraging Unhealthy Weight Loss Methods. This rule includes (but is not limited to): GLP-1s, VLCDs, misusing medication, extended fasting, disordered behaviour…

GLP-1s are explicitly classed alongside very-low-calorie diets and disordered eating. For Hims, Ro, Found, Calibrate, Sequence/Wegovy DTC, and Eli Lilly's LillyDirect-adjacent brands, this is the largest weight-loss sub on Reddit and it is structurally hostile to your category. Noom, by contrast, is one of the few brands with a credible non-medication play here; their Sam Wheatley (then VP Growth Marketing) did a founder AMA on channel-market fit but Noom's actual Reddit work is paid, not organic posting.

How to post here without getting removed. Other notable removals: "No Promotion of Diet Cash Pools/Requests for Money" (kills anything DietBet-shaped), "No Self Promotion" with explicit ban on Discord links outside the weekly thread, "No Accountability Partner Posts" (use the weekly Track With Me Thursday thread), and "No Surveys." For non-medication apps (calorie tracking, accountability, behavioral change), worth posting in only via the weekly Track With Me Thursday thread, with a declared affiliation in your username and post body. For any GLP-1/Ozempic-adjacent brand: do not post organically. Use Reddit Ads with strict creative review.


r/keto

~3.9M subscribers · reddit.com/r/keto

Founded 2010. "The Ketogenic Diet is a low carbohydrate method of eating. r/keto is place to share thoughts, ideas, benefits, and experiences." One of the more brand-tolerant subs on this list, but the MLM-poisoned-well dynamic is severe.

Why it matters for healthtech. Recipe content, meal-prep hardware, ingredient brands (specific MCT oils, exogenous-ketone brands with third-party testing, low-carb flour brands) all see organic mentions. Apps die unless framed as macro-tracking tools, and even then survive only via user mentions. The sub's rule on watermarks is especially revealing: "If you are posting progress pictures with a watermark we ask that the watermark contain your Reddit username only." That extremely specific clause exists because they have seen so much watermark-as-promotion behavior they wrote a dedicated rule.

How to post here without getting removed. "No Self Promotion/Spam" with explicit bans on personal blogs, channels, websites, social media pages, affiliate/referral links, and surveys for market research. "No Cheat Posts" (off-topic and triggering). "Be Respectful and Accurate" with explicit "intellectual dishonesty, misinformation" bans. "No Giving or Soliciting Medical Advice." The MLM context is the binding constraint: any product with a multi-tier affiliate or "coach" structure gets nuked. Sister sub r/xxketo explicitly bans MLM advertisements.


r/bodybuilding

~2.9M subscribers · reddit.com/r/bodybuilding

Founded 2008. The mods explicitly narrow the topic: "This sub is about body building. Specifically, the sport that involves preparing yourself for a competition (includes bikini, fitness, figure and physique). For the purposes of this sub bodybuilding is not about building a better body or general weight lifting." If you sell to general gym-goers, this sub is not your audience.

Why it matters for healthtech. Worth a presence only for products that compete in a competitor-prep context: pre-workout, intra-workout, posing oils, posing trunks, contest-prep coaching software. Branded supplement reviews can survive if they engage with the technical detail (creatine forms, citrulline malate ratios, micellar vs. whey protein chemistry). Whoop, Eight Sleep, and physique-tracking tools get organic mentions. Pre-workouts with proprietary blends get torched. PED culture is openly tolerated, but selling PED-adjacent supplements is not; the community is highly literate on the Bodybuilding.com $7M FDA fine for selling spiked supplements and has long memory.

How to post here without getting removed. Rule 1 on Self Promotion: "Members of the community who are here merely for self-promotion or to solicit traffic to just one site will be banned. Do not repeatedly post links to only one website." Softer than r/nutrition or r/Meditation; links to your own content occasionally are tolerated, making them your whole posting history is not. Most user questions are funneled into "Training Tuesday," "Training Thursday," and "Daily Discussion" threads. A Hims-style men's-health DTC has no business here.


r/xxfitness

~3.1M subscribers · reddit.com/r/xxfitness

Founded 2010. "We're a community targeted at female and gender non binary/gender non conforming redditors to discuss fitness." The most distinctive rule set in the whole shortlist.

Why it matters for healthtech. Programmatic mentions in user posts work; brand voice does not. Strength-training apps (Caliber, Future, Ladder, Tonal-style) get discussed organically because the sub's content gravity is around progressive overload conversations. The sub culturally rejects "fitspo" and transformation spectacle, which matters for any apparel, supplement, or app brand whose typical creative leans on body transformation.

How to post here without getting removed. Direct rules include "Spam / Self-promotion / Undisclosed Affiliate Link" (the "undisclosed affiliate link" wording is unusually specific; they actively police affiliate marketing), "Microaggression" as its own rule, and "Single Issue/Personal Agenda: Comments from users who appear on this subreddit only to discuss a specific topic with no history of participation on r/xxfitness will be removed." That last one is specifically aimed at brand reps who parachute in. Rules also forbid asking for "shared experiences regarding a medical condition, procedure, or recovery" and "Possible ED or body dysmorphia related" content. A great paid-targeting audience and a nearly impossible organic-posting target.


r/running

~4.2M subscribers · reddit.com/r/running

Founded 2008. The most welcoming sidebar copy of the eight, the strictest self-promotion rule of the eight.

Why it matters for healthtech. Specific running-shoe brands get the only organic latitude because the community organizes its identity around shoe choice. Strava and Nike Run Club appear in conversation regularly, referenced organically. Almost no brand can post; not even On, Hoka, or Nike. Mentions only flow when users introduce them. The sub is one of the cleanest paid-targeting audiences on Reddit because of its tight topical focus and high LTV (runners spend on shoes, races, GPS watches, training plans).

How to post here without getting removed. Rule 3 verbatim: "No self-promotion (including links to personal blogs, social media, Youtube channel, etc.), advertising, spam, or surveys. This includes giveaways, charity events, and promotional discounts." The "giveaways" and "charity events" carve-outs are unusual; most subs allow charity content. r/running does not. Rule 7: "Do not solicit medical advice. This includes 'Has anyone else experienced this injury?' type posts." This kills the entire injury-product (orthotics, recovery wearables, PT-app) marketing template. Skip for organic. Most attempted official brand AMAs get removed before they go live.


r/nutrition

~5.9M subscribers · reddit.com/r/nutrition

Founded 2008. One of the most aggressive moderation regimes of any large health sub. Self-described as a sub for "discussion of nutrition science. Macronutrients, micronutrients, vitamins, diets, and nutrition news... Civil discourse is required."

Why it matters for healthtech. Effectively nothing organic. r/nutrition is functionally a nutrition-science discussion board where even a registered dietitian's blog post would be removed on sight. The opportunity for marketers is reading-only: using the sub to mine objections, terminology, and context for your own SEO and positioning work. Influencer Marketing Hub recommends r/Nutrition and r/Supplements alongside fitness subs because they are "full of real buyers verifying claims and validating benefits." That validation happens through Reddit Ads, not organic posting in r/nutrition.

How to post here without getting removed. The rule is so explicit it's worth quoting verbatim: "No Spam or Promotion. ZERO tolerance. NO exceptions. You may not link to, discuss, or mention anything by you, about you, or for you. This includes (but is not limited to) your blog, website, book, article, spreadsheet, video, social media, app, survey, product, anything else you are affiliated with, and content from those sources. No market research. There are no exceptions." The rule literally mentions "spreadsheet" and "survey"; they have seen every workaround. Also banned: "No Dietary Activism / Crusading," "No Medical Concern Context, Requests, or Advice," "Personal situations posts are NOT allowed," and "bot and AI accounts and content are not allowed." Treat as listening-only intelligence. Even a credentialed dietitian's post will be removed.


r/Meditation

~3.5M subscribers · reddit.com/r/Meditation

Founded 2008. "This community is for sharing experiences, stories and instruction relating to the practice of meditation."

Why it matters for healthtech. Genuinely nothing organic for branded apps. The cultural backdrop matters: the broader academic and journalist critique of meditation apps as "wellness-industrial complex" is the prevailing intellectual frame in this community. The Buddhify CEO's published view captures the in-community ethos: "meditation is not a content business, it's a wisdom business... The true purpose of mindfulness training [is] to get you to the point where you no longer need mindfulness training. If a meditation app says the only way to progress is through that same app, then it either doesn't understand the practice or is being disingenuous." Any brand that posts must accept it is being measured against that bar.

How to post here without getting removed. The "No self-promotion" rule is one of the most explicitly written on Reddit: "Self-promotion is not allowed. This applies to products, services, contents, groups, and events, regardless of cost. Common examples include sharing a website, blog, app, YouTube content, affiliate link, or a subreddit you moderate. Requesting feedback or testing for a product or service is also considered self-promotion. Brand accounts (name, profile, and/or socials are specific to a product...)" That parenthetical means Headspace, Calm, Waking Up, Insight Timer, Balance, Ten Percent Happier, and every emerging mindfulness app are blocked from existing on this sub as a brand entity, not just from posting. Skip for organic. Reddit Ads still work for awareness.


Posting playbook for healthtech and wellness

The communities above are individually different, but the operating loop across all of them is the same. Health Reddit works for brands when (a) you bring real authority, (b) you accept months of un-ROI'd participation before any branded message, and (c) you treat criticism as the value, not the problem.

Bring credentialed humans, or skip the channel. Tara Sparks, Paid and Earned Media Director at Novo Nordisk, led the Wegovy AMA program that generated a "74% spike in consumer questions about Wegovy" per eMarketer. Notably, the AMA happened in a coordinated venue, not in r/loseit (which bans the topic). Kaela Shupe at Tend (dental DTC) ran a successful Reddit program with their Chief Dental Officer Dr. Chris Salernos engaging in dentist and hygienist subs with transparent professional identity. Pattern: real credentials, transparent identity, permission-based AMA framing.

Earn karma in adjacent communities first. Kent Yoshimura, co-founder of Neuro (nootropics), described his approach: co-founder Ryan Chen accumulated karma in r/Nootropics over months before any pitch. The result: "It was so great because the community felt so tight-knit. And pitching into that community was one of the biggest reasons that the crowdfunding on Indiegogo was a success." This is the canonical earn-the-right-to-ask Reddit playbook for health.

Disclosure is the only stable position. Hidden ownership is the only thing more reliably banned than open promotion. La Roche-Posay's Elisabeth Araujo earned community goodwill in a r/SkincareAddiction AMA by acknowledging a request for a tinted Toleriane Ultra and promising to "brief the labs." The disclosure was the trust-builder; the engagement was the win.

The trust ceiling is real, even on Reddit. KFF (July 2025) found only 5% of social media users trust "most" health information they encounter on Reddit; 62% trust "a little" or "some." Reddit is a trust amplifier relative to the post itself, not a trust substitute for credentialed sources. Your goal isn't to convince readers to trust your brand; it's to be a credible voice they validate elsewhere.

Reddit Ads are the legitimate paid path for restricted categories. GLP-1 brands, supplement brands, mental-health apps, and fitness apps all have meaningful Reddit Ads opportunity even where organic posting is restricted. Reddit's pitch to health marketers (700+ health/wellness communities, healthcare grew +48% YoY as an organic category, 79% of women say "Reddit helps them learn about health without judgment," users spend 15× more time engaging in Reddit health communities vs. other platforms per Social Media Today) is real. The compliance and creative-review workflow for Reddit Ads is what makes the channel viable for restricted categories.

Influencer marketing on Reddit is structurally different from Instagram or TikTok. Reddit users hate undisclosed paid promotion to a degree other platforms don't approach. The HailCorporate meta-sub catalogs suspected stealth advertising in real-time. If you pay an influencer to post on Reddit, the post must include "#ad" or equivalent disclosure in the title or first comment, and the influencer's account history must support the claim of genuine use. Otherwise the campaign will be exposed and your brand will be remembered as the one that got caught.

Mental-health and chronic-illness subs are ethically off-limits regardless of marketing utility. This list deliberately excludes r/SuicideWatch, r/selfharm, r/AnorexiaNervosa, r/EatingDisorders, r/depression, r/Anxiety, and the chronic-illness diagnosis-support subs. Any marketing presence in these communities is harm-asymmetric; the brand reputation cost of being on a list that recommends them outweighs any conceivable upside. We discuss the line between "appropriate listening for medical-tech buyers" and "exploitative" in considered.

The honest summary: Reddit is the largest source of unfiltered health buyer language on the internet, and it is also the most aggressively defended against marketing infiltration of any vertical we cover. The brands that succeed bring real expertise, disclose openly, accept months of investment, and treat the channel as a long-term trust asset rather than a campaign surface.


FAQ

Why isn't r/ADHD on the main list

It's actually the most relevant sub for many healthtech brands (focus apps, telehealth ADHD, supplements), but it's also the most aggressively moderated sub in the entire health Reddit ecosystem. The 2024 incident where r/ADHD mods publicly accused ADDitude Magazine (the largest ADHD content publisher) of "promoting unscientific quack practices like homeopathy and reiki" and "junk science" and auto-blocked all ADDitude links is the canonical example of how this community treats outside content. Direct rules include "No Alternative Medication or Substance Misuse," "No Faith-Based Practices/Pseudoscience," and "No Advertising, Self-Promotion, 'I made this,' or feedback requests. No ads or app promotion. If you made it, work on it, benefit from it, were asked to share it, or know the creator, don't post it. Free or paid doesn't matter." We cover r/ADHD in detail in considered with explicit guidance on the path forward.

Can a GLP-1 telehealth brand market on Reddit at all

Organically, mostly no, in the largest weight-loss subs that explicitly ban GLP-1 promotion. Through Reddit Ads, yes, with creative-compliance review for FDA and FTC restrictions. Through formal AMAs in branded subs you create and steward, yes. Through paid influencer programs with proper #ad disclosure, with caution and FTC review. The Wegovy AMA programs are the most-cited successful pattern.

What's the realistic timeline before Reddit produces healthtech leads

Six to twelve months from first comment to first measurable lead, longer than most other verticals because the trust threshold is higher and the regulatory restrictions on promotional content are tighter. The compounding asset is search and AI-citation presence: Reddit threads about your category compound for years.

Is r/SkincareAddiction the right sub for our brand

Probably yes if you sell skincare. r/SkincareAddiction is covered in detail in our awesome-ecommerce-subreddits list because it's editorially closer to consumer-DTC than to healthtech. The La Roche-Posay AMA is the case study every skincare brand should know.

What about Reddit's own pitch about 79% of women trusting Reddit for health info

Real, but contextual. The number comes from Reddit's 2025 Health Summit and reflects sentiment about Reddit as a research surface, not as a place that has solved promotion. Reddit's commercial team is selling pharma and consumer-health brands on the audience size; the community's mod teams are protecting against the very promotion that audience-size pitch enables. Both can be true.

Can we run a branded sub for our health product

Yes, and several brands have done it well. NeoReach's crypto-Reddit playbook generalizes: branded subs work as customer-retention surfaces, not acquisition channels. Expect 2+ years of community-management investment before the sub functions independently. The scale comparison: 1Password's r/1Password drives less than 1% of overall referral traffic but functions as the brand's customer-retention heartbeat.

What gets a healthtech brand permabanned

Three patterns: (1) undisclosed paid posts (FTC-violation territory and Reddit's most aggressively detected offense), (2) astroturfing campaigns where multiple accounts coordinate to seed brand mentions (vote manipulation, the most severe site-wide offense), and (3) any product that resembles MLM (the cultural antigen across every health sub). The first two are detected by Reddit admins via account-correlation tooling; the third is detected by the community within hours.


Subreddits we considered and didn't include

A note on what's not here and why, since most "best of" lists don't show their work:

  • r/ADHD (~2.2M): critically relevant for ADHD apps, telehealth, supplements; the most aggressively moderated. Mods publicly tarred ADDitude Magazine (a legitimate publisher) in 2024. Operate by ADHD-community ethics: do not call your product a treatment, do not claim it solves ADHD, do not pay ADHD influencers, do not target ADHD-diagnosis ads, do not frame productivity as moral worth. The only viable path is multi-month genuine helpfulness in adjacent threads.
  • r/Supplements (~551K): highly relevant for any supplement brand and one of the better-tolerating subs for ingredient-level discussion. Smaller than r/Fitness but qualitatively higher commercial intent. Add to your plan.
  • r/intermittentfasting (~992K): same GLP-1 ban as r/loseit. Major IF-app target (Zero, DoFasting, Simple) with the same medication-promo restriction.
  • r/PlantBasedDiet (~525K): relevant for plant-based supplement, meal-kit, and protein brands. The "prior moderator permission" wording in their rules is unusual; there's an actual diplomatic path.
  • r/yoga (~3.3M): more permissive than r/Meditation. "Occasional links to your content are okay assuming compliance with reddit's guidelines." Worth including for yoga apparel, mat, and class-platform brands.
  • r/Mindfulness (~1.5M): functionally as restrictive as r/Meditation.
  • r/StopDrinking (~667K), r/decaf: recovery and substance-cessation subs. Relevant for sober-curious DTC (Athletic Brewing-adjacent), recovery telehealth (Monument, Tempest, Ria Health), L-theanine and mushroom-coffee alternatives. Ethically sensitive; commercial use is high-risk.
  • r/30PlusSkinCare (~2.4M), r/SkincareAddiction, r/AsianBeauty, r/acne (~1.7M): skincare-adjacent healthtech (Curology, Hims/Hers skincare, Agency, Musely, dermatology DTC). Highly relevant. Covered in awesome-ecommerce-subreddits.
  • r/diabetes, r/Type1Diabetes, r/diabetes_t2: chronic illness with explicit no-misinformation rules. Highly relevant for CGM brands (Dexcom, Abbott Libre, Stelo, Lingo), GLP-1 brands, and diabetes management apps. Require the strongest editorial care about the line between health information and CGM marketing.
  • r/ehlersdanlos, r/POTS, r/CFS, r/MECFS, r/Fibromyalgia, r/Endometriosis, r/PCOS: chronic-illness diagnosis-support communities. These are where chronic-illness patients get diagnosis support after years of medical gaslighting; brand voice in any form is profoundly unwelcome and ethically fraught.
  • Mental-health crisis subs (r/SuicideWatch, r/selfharm, r/AnorexiaNervosa, r/EatingDisorders, r/depression, r/Anxiety, r/AlAnon): ethically off-limits. There is no version of this list that should include them. The harm cost is real.

Further reading


Related lists

Live version with brand-mention data

The live page on Soar tracks which brands ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews cite across these communities, refreshed quarterly:

soar.sh/subreddits/best-for/healthtech

Contributing

Spotted a missing subreddit, a stale removal-rate observation, or a mod-rule change? Open an issue or submit a PR. See CONTRIBUTING.md.

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