Search all of Reddit. Every post, every comment.
Reddit's own search stops at post titles. BuzzSearch searches the conversations themselves, and answers in plain English with links.
Ask it something real
- Find comments comparing Shopify and Etsy from actual sellers
- What did people say about standing desks under $300 this year?
- Search r/skincareaddiction for tretinoin purging timelines
- Find threads where founders describe getting their first 100 customers
Comment-level search
The answers on Reddit live in the replies. BuzzSearch searches and reads comments, not just post titles.
Ask, don't keyword-guess
Describe what you're looking for the way you'd ask a person. It handles the query variations for you.
Links to the exact spot
Every result points at the specific post or comment, so you can verify and read the context.
The most-recommended budget grinders across r/espresso and r/pourover in the last 6 months: the DF54 (most mentions, praised for value), the Baratza Encore ESP (best for beginners), and the Kingrinder K6 for hand-grinding.
“DF54 changed my mind about what $200 gets you. Buy once, cry once doesn't apply anymore.”
reddit.com/r/espresso · 412 upvotes
How it works
Describe what you need
A question, a comparison, a phrase you half-remember. Anything works.
It searches live
Posts and full comment threads across all public subreddits, as they are right now.
Read the sourced answer
A direct answer with the exact posts and comments linked underneath.
Searching to understand a market? Reddit market research · AI market research
Questions
Can I search Reddit comments, not just posts?
Yes, and that is the point. BuzzSearch reads full comment threads, so answers buried three replies deep actually surface.
Why not just use Reddit's search or Google site:reddit.com?
Both match keywords against post titles and bodies, then leave you to open twenty tabs. BuzzSearch reads the threads for you and answers the question, with the tabs attached as sources.
Is the data live?
Yes. Searches run against Reddit as it is now, not a stale archive.
Can I export what I find?
Yes. Take quotes, links, and findings out of any research run, and finished runs stay in your account.
Does it work for niche subreddits?
Yes. It finds relevant communities for your question regardless of size. Small subreddits are often where the best answers live.