Brands treat a Reddit ban like a Twitter suspension — annoying, recoverable, a cost of doing business. It is not. A Reddit ban can be permanent, linked to your IP and device fingerprint, and silent. The silent version — the shadowban — is the one that quietly destroys Korean-brand Reddit programs, because you don't know it happened. This is the field guide to not getting banned, written from operating inside the rules across many K-brand accounts.
The four things that get brands banned
- Vote manipulation. The fastest path to a permanent ban. Buying upvotes, coordinating votes across accounts, asking staff to upvote a thread. Reddit's systems detect voting patterns extremely well, and the penalty escalates to the whole account network.
- Self-promotion past tolerance. Reddit's informal "9:1 rule" — for every promotional post, nine genuine contributions — is enforced unevenly but real. A new account whose history is all brand mentions gets flagged as spam by both automod and humans.
- Account networks acting in coordination. Multiple accounts, same IP or device, posting or commenting in the same threads. This is the classic Korean-brand mistake: a team of five all posting from the office about the brand. Reddit clusters them and bans the cluster.
- Ignoring per-subreddit rules. Every subreddit has its own rules and automod filters — some ban any link, some require flair, some forbid brand mentions entirely. Violating them gets you removed, and repeated violations get you banned from that community.
The shadowban: the one you don't see
A shadowban is the dangerous one because there is no notification. Your posts and comments appear normal to you — you can see them when logged in — but they are hidden from everyone else and from search. A brand can run a "Reddit program" for a month, posting diligently, and reach exactly zero people, because every thread was invisible. By the time someone notices the karma never moves and the comments get no replies, weeks of work — and the threads the AI needed — have evaporated.
Shadowbans hit new accounts that behave like spam: posting links early, promotional language, low age, no genuine history. The warming protocol in the playbook exists largely to avoid this.
Why bans are so costly
Two reasons a Reddit ban is worse than other platforms.
- They're often permanent and hardware-linked. Reddit bans can attach to IP address and device fingerprint, not just the account. A banned brand can find that every new account it creates from the same office is auto-suppressed. The contamination outlives the original mistake.
- They erase the AI asset. A removed or shadowbanned thread is invisible to the AI engines you were building it for. The entire point of Reddit GEO — a citable thread — is destroyed the moment the thread is hidden. You don't just lose reach; you lose the citation.
Why Korean brands hit these specifically
The pattern is consistent. Korean brands often arrive from a Naver/KakaoTalk playbook where coordinated posting and review-seeding are normal and effective. On Reddit, that exact behavior is the banned behavior. The instinct to "get the team to upvote our post" or "have everyone share their experience" is precisely what Reddit's systems are built to catch. It's not a skills gap — it's a platform-norms gap, and it's covered in why Korean brands struggle on Reddit.
The rules for safe operation
- One warmed account per operator. Real age, real history, real karma before any brand-adjacent post.
- Never touch votes. No buying, no coordinating, no asking. Votes must be organic, always.
- Participate far more than you promote. The account's value to the community must visibly exceed its value to the brand.
- Read and follow each subreddit's rules before posting — links, flair, disclosure, brand-mention policies vary widely.
- Disclose where required. Many subs allow brand participation if you identify yourself. Transparency is safer and more durable than hiding.
- Avoid shared-IP clustering. Operators posting about the same brand from the same network is the highest-risk pattern.
This is, in one list, why a Reddit-only agency exists. The depth and discipline required to operate at scale without tripping these systems is the entry barrier — and it's the difference between a program that compounds and a brand that's silently banned by week three. The full operating method is in the Reddit GEO playbook, and the cost of doing it properly is in how much Reddit marketing costs.
FAQ
How do I know if my brand is shadowbanned?
If you can see them logged in but not logged out, you're shadowbanned. Persistent zero engagement on otherwise normal posts is the tell.
Can a Reddit ban really be permanent?
This is why a single careless campaign can contaminate every future account from the same network. Recovery is difficult and sometimes impossible.
Is asking employees to upvote really that bad?
Reddit's systems detect it well. The instinct is natural for brands from review-seeding cultures, but on Reddit it's the banned behavior.
Can we recover a banned brand presence?
Standing, rules-compliant operation is the only durable approach. See in-house vs agency for who should run it.
Want this run for your brand?
Upvote runs Reddit end to end for Korean brands entering the US — reputation, community, Reddit Ads, and GEO measured weekly across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, and Gemini.
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