Subreddit comparison

r/technology vs r/programming

Last updated June 2026

A side-by-side look at two of Reddit's communities - size, focus, and which one is the better fit for you.

Which should you join?

r/technology is the larger community at roughly 15.3M members, so it moves faster and surfaces more content and breaking discussion. r/programming is more focused, which usually means higher signal and a tighter community. If you want volume and the broadest range of posts, start with r/technology; if you want depth and less noise, r/programming is the better home. Many people simply join both and mute whichever gets too noisy.

Frequently asked questions

Is r/technology or r/programming bigger?
r/technology is the bigger community, with approximately 15.3M members compared with r/programming. Size is not everything, though - a larger subreddit means more posts and faster conversation, but also more noise and lower-effort content, while a smaller community is often more focused and higher-signal. The right choice depends on whether you value breadth and activity or depth and quality. Member counts here are approximate and refreshed periodically; for the exact current numbers, open each community on Reddit, where the subscriber count is shown in the sidebar.
Should I join r/technology or r/programming?
r/technology is the larger community at roughly 15.3M members, so it moves faster and surfaces more content and breaking discussion. r/programming is more focused, which usually means higher signal and a tighter community. If you want volume and the broadest range of posts, start with r/technology; if you want depth and less noise, r/programming is the better home. Many people simply join both and mute whichever gets too noisy. There is no cost to trying both for a week and seeing which one fits how you actually use Reddit - the feeds will quickly tell you which community's tone, rules, and post style you prefer.