In January 2026, The Guardian reported that Reddit has overtaken TikTok to become the UK’s fourth most visited social media platform. Drawing on Ofcom data, the article noted significant growth over the past two years, with around three in five UK internet users now engaging with Reddit and more than 75% of 18–24-year-olds using it regularly. For a platform once seen as niche, Reddit is now firmly mainstream.
Why Reddit Is Rising in the UK
Search engines and AI visibility are major factors. Changes to Google’s algorithm have elevated Reddit threads in search results, especially for experience based queries.
The visuals below show that searches like “Is University of Manchester good for economics?” and “Student life in Sheffield,” Reddit ranks first and third on Google, sitting above or alongside official university and UCAS pages.
This is significant. Students are not going out of their way to find Reddit. It is appearing at the top of their research.


There is also a behavioural shift. Younger users are seeking peer insight rather than polished university messaging. Reddit feels real, less curated and more conversational, which increases its perceived credibility.
At the same time, its audience has broadened. What was once seen as niche is now mainstream, covering housing, careers, city life and student experience – all central to university choice.
What This Means for University Choice
Reddit is increasingly functioning as a review site for applicants.
Prospective students are using it to ask questions that rarely appear in marketing copy:
Is this course actually worth the fees?
How intense is the workload?
Is the accommodation decent and affordable?
Does this degree lead to a job?
What is student life really like in this city?
Threads answering these questions often contain detailed lived experience. This content can shape perception before a prospective applicant ever reaches an official university channel.
Because such a large proportion of UK internet users are now active on Reddit, this influence is no longer marginal. It’s operating at scale.
Where Reddit Sits in the Decision Journey
The traditional model of prospectus to open day to application no longer reflects reality.
Today, students start with a search. They encounter Reddit discussions high in the results. AI tools summarise common themes. Video platforms provide visual reassurance. Only then do they visit the official website.
By the time they reach your site, they are not starting from scratch. They are checking whether what you say matches what they have already heard.

Implications for HE Marketers
First, listening matters. Monitoring relevant subreddits can reveal recurring concerns, misconceptions and differentiators.
Second, Reddit offers insight that can strengthen other channels. FAQs, open day messaging, chatbot responses and course pages can all address the real questions students are asking.
Third, Reddit content increasingly influences what appears in AI generated summaries. If certain narratives dominate discussion, they may indirectly shape how your institution is represented in search environments.
Why Reddit Now Matters
At Hunterlodge, we see Reddit less as a social platform and more as a live focus group. It shows, in real time, what students are worried about, what they value and where messaging feels unclear. Universities that pay attention to those conversations are better placed to respond with clarity and confidence.
If Reddit is already influencing how prospective students see your institution, the question is not whether it matters. It is how you choose to respond.
That is where the opportunity lies.
If you want to better understand how digital platforms influence university choice, Hunterlodge can help you turn insights into action. Get in touch kim.mclellan@hunterlodge.co.uk