Cybersecurity is one of the hardest verticals to market in. Your buyers are technical, skeptical, and actively hostile to anything that sounds like a vendor pitch. They've read every "next-gen AI-powered threat detection" headline, and they've stopped believing them.
That's exactly what makes Reddit such a strong channel for cybersecurity companies. The same people who ignore your LinkedIn ads are on r/netsec and r/sysadmin right now — asking real questions, evaluating tools honestly, and making buying decisions based on peer recommendations rather than marketing copy.
We're a Reddit Certified Partner and we've run Reddit campaigns for cybersecurity SaaS companies. Here's what actually works in 2026.
Why Reddit works for cybersecurity buyers
The cybersecurity subreddits are some of the most engaged professional communities on the internet. r/netsec has 500,000 subscribers who are predominantly working security practitioners. r/sysadmin has 900,000. r/devops has 300,000. These aren't casual browsers — they're professionals actively looking for solutions to real operational problems.
The key difference from LinkedIn: Reddit users are there to get information and solve problems, not to manage a professional persona. They're more candid, more critical, and more willing to engage with something that actually addresses their real concerns.
The cybersecurity community will fact-check your claims in the comments. That's not a threat — it's an opportunity. If your product is legitimate, community validation in the comment section outperforms any testimonial you can put on a landing page.
Reddit also lets you reach buyers at the exact moment they're researching. When a sysadmin posts "Looking for a SIEM that doesn't require a full-time analyst to manage" in r/sysadmin — that's a buying signal. Your ad appearing in that community at that moment is higher intent than almost any other channel.
The right subreddits for cybersecurity advertising
Subreddit selection is the most important variable in your campaign. Here's how the major security communities break down:
r/netsec — 500K subscribers
The most technical security subreddit. Audience is primarily security researchers, red team practitioners, and security engineers. Best for: endpoint detection, threat intelligence, penetration testing tools, vulnerability management. Tone is highly technical — ads must match. Avoid any marketing language that sounds non-technical.
r/cybersecurity — 800K subscribers
Broader audience than r/netsec — includes security managers, compliance professionals, and buyers at mid-market companies. Best for: GRC tools, security awareness training, identity management, cloud security. More receptive to outcome-focused messaging than pure technical specs.
r/sysadmin — 900K subscribers
IT administrators and infrastructure managers. This is the "practical security" audience — people responsible for actually maintaining security posture across their environments. Best for: endpoint management, patch management, network monitoring, backup and recovery. They care about operational efficiency as much as security outcomes.
r/devops — 300K subscribers
DevSecOps practitioners and platform engineers. Best for: secrets management, container security, SAST/DAST tools, supply chain security. This audience responds to integration-focused messaging — "works with your existing pipeline" beats "enterprise-grade security."
r/AskNetsec — 120K subscribers
Question-driven, high intent. People asking specific "what tool should I use for X" questions. Smaller audience but extremely high relevance. Great for retargeting campaigns and for building awareness in a community actively in evaluation mode.
r/cloudsecurity — 80K subscribers
Cloud security practitioners and architects. Best for CSPM, CIEM, cloud-native security tools. Less advertiser saturation than the larger subreddits — lower CPCs, high relevance.
For a full map of subreddits by B2B SaaS category, see our B2B SaaS subreddit targeting guide.
Creative strategy for a skeptical technical audience
The cybersecurity community has extremely high BS detection. Creative that works in other B2B verticals will often backfire here. Here's what the community responds to — and what it doesn't.
What gets engagement
- Technical specificity — mention actual attack vectors, frameworks (MITRE ATT&CK, CIS Controls), or CVE patterns relevant to your use case
- Honest problem framing — "managing 10,000 alerts a day with a 2-person team" is more compelling than "AI-powered SOC automation"
- Real numbers — response times, detection rates, false positive rates that are specific and verifiable
- Integration focus — what you work with (AWS, Azure, Okta, Splunk, etc.) is often more important than what you do
- Transparent pricing signals — even a "starts at $X/month" in the copy dramatically improves qualified click rate
What gets ignored or downvoted
- "Next-gen," "AI-powered," "zero-trust" used as marketing language without technical context
- Stock photography of people in hoodies looking at screens
- Vague enterprise claims ("trusted by Fortune 500 companies")
- Copy written by someone who clearly doesn't understand the technical domain
- Anything that looks like it was generated by AI without human review
Read the top posts in your target subreddits for two weeks before writing a single line of ad copy. You'll hear exactly what language your buyers use to describe the problem your product solves. Use that language. It's not a style choice — it's the difference between getting clicks and getting downvoted.
For a full breakdown of Reddit creative strategy, see our guide on Reddit ad creative: what works and what gets downvoted.
The budget and timeline reality
Cybersecurity buyers have longer consideration cycles than most SaaS categories. They're evaluating security tools for months, going through procurement, getting sign-off from legal and compliance. Reddit is most powerful as an awareness and consideration channel — not a "click and buy" direct response channel.
Budget framework for cybersecurity SaaS on Reddit:
- Month 1: $3,000 to $5,000 media spend — subreddit and creative testing across r/netsec, r/cybersecurity, r/sysadmin
- Month 2: $4,000 to $6,000 — cut bottom performers, add retargeting for site visitors
- Month 3: $5,000 to $8,000 — scale winning ad sets, expand to r/devops and adjacent communities
Expect initial CPLs of $120 to $180 before optimization. With proper subreddit targeting and creative iteration, CPLs typically drop to $60 to $100 within 90 days. For comparison, LinkedIn CPLs for cybersecurity SaaS typically run $200 to $400 for comparable lead quality.
See our full Reddit ads cost guide for detailed benchmarks across verticals.
We launched in r/netsec and r/sysadmin with native-style ads leading with the specific operational problem (alert fatigue and manual triage), not the product. Creative used technical language drawn directly from community discussions. CPL dropped from $190 on LinkedIn to $75 on Reddit within 90 days. The qualified pipeline generated in month 3 alone recovered the full 3-month media investment.
Attribution: the cybersecurity challenge
Cybersecurity buyers are privacy-conscious. Many use ad blockers, VPNs, and browser extensions that block tracking pixels. This means Reddit's reported conversion numbers will undercount your actual results — sometimes significantly.
How we handle attribution for cybersecurity clients:
- Reddit pixel for directional data (expect 30 to 50% capture rate vs other verticals' 50 to 70%)
- UTM parameters in all ad URLs for GA4 tracking
- CRM first-touch attribution — ask every qualified lead how they heard about you on the discovery call
- Monitor branded search volume in Google Search Console as a proxy for Reddit awareness impact
- Track direct traffic increases during active Reddit campaign periods
In our experience, cybersecurity brands running Reddit typically see 2x to 3x the attributed conversions when comparing CRM-reported sources vs Reddit pixel data alone.
The angle that consistently works for security products
Across the cybersecurity campaigns we've run, one creative pattern reliably outperforms the rest: leading with the operational pain, not the security outcome.
Security professionals don't wake up thinking "I need to improve my threat detection." They wake up thinking "my team is drowning in alerts" or "we had a near-miss last week and I need to know how we almost got breached" or "I'm one sysadmin managing security for 500 endpoints and I need something I can actually run."
The product you're selling is the solution. The ad creative should be about the problem. Every word of copy should feel like it was written by someone who has sat in their exact role and felt their exact frustration.
If you want to see what that looks like for your specific security product, we'll build 3 free Reddit ad creatives for your brand.
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Includes subreddit databases, creative frameworks, and the 90-day campaign roadmap. Free PDF — includes $500 in Reddit ad credits.
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