Skip to main content
Back to Fun generators

Fun

Reddit Post Title Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A Reddit post title generator turns your topic into title ideas shaped like the posts that actually perform on Reddit. Enter what your post is about and it returns options using the platform's native patterns: the TIL, the bracketed [Update], the "am I the only one who", the "roast it" show-and-tell, the PSA, and the unpopular-opinion hook. Redditors use it to give a post the best shot at being seen, to phrase a question so people want to answer, and to fit the tone of a community without sounding like an ad. Reddit rewards titles that feel authentic and spark discussion, and these formats are built around that. Everything generates instantly in your browser and reshuffles each run. Pick a title that genuinely matches your post, then tailor it to the specific subreddit's rules and culture — a title that fits the community always beats a generic one.

Loading usage…

Free forever — no account required

How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Enter your post topic.
  2. Click Generate to see Reddit-style title ideas.
  3. Pick one that genuinely matches your post.
  4. Tailor it to the specific subreddit's rules and culture.

Use Cases

  • Phrasing a Reddit post so it gets seen and upvoted
  • Wording a question so people want to answer it
  • Fitting a post to a community's tone
  • Brainstorming title angles for a show-and-tell post
  • Avoiding titles that read like an advertisement

Tips

  • Read the subreddit rules before posting — many require tags.
  • Match the community's tone rather than a generic format.
  • Be transparent if you created the thing you are sharing.
  • Lead with curiosity or value, never a sales pitch.

FAQ

why do these formats work on reddit

Reddit rewards authenticity and discussion. Formats like TIL, [Update], and unpopular-opinion signal a genuine post rather than self-promotion, and they invite engagement, which is what drives visibility in most subreddits.

will these titles break subreddit rules

They are general starting points, and every subreddit has its own rules and culture. Always read the sidebar and tailor your title accordingly — some communities require specific tags or ban certain formats, and fitting in matters more than any template.

how do i avoid sounding like an ad

Lead with genuine value or curiosity rather than a pitch, use the community's natural voice, and be transparent if you made the thing you are sharing. The "roast it" framing, for example, invites honest feedback rather than reading as promotion.