r/HomeImprovement peaks Fridays 8pm-10pm UTC
r/HomeImprovement was created on August 18, 2008, making it 17 years and 8 months old and one of the earliest subreddits on Reddit. With 4,763,268 members, this is a large and well-established subreddit with significant reach and influence on Reddit.
r/HomeImprovement is steadily growing, with 21,309 new members in the last 30 days.
r/HomeImprovement serves as a practical troubleshooting hub for residential construction and renovation, distinct from purely inspirational DIY communities. While ostensibly focused on home projects, its core function centers on preemptive validation of plans and solutions, with members frequently seeking expert feedback to avoid costly errors before execution. The requirement for all posts to be text-only, coupled with a mandatory minimum karma threshold, enforces substantive, detailed inquiries over casual questions or visual showcases. This structure, alongside the unusual policy that trending posts require zero upvotes, prioritizes urgent problem-solving over popularity, enabling immediate visibility for critical issues like electrical hazards or plumbing emergencies regardless of initial community engagement. The crossposting mandate to DIY.StackExchange further underscores a commitment to technical accuracy and enduring knowledge curation beyond transient Reddit discussions.
The community thrives on highly specific, project-oriented dialogue, with typical posts detailing precise challenges—such as structural modifications, code compliance, or material selection—and receiving granular, experience-based advice in comment threads. Averaging 27.5 comments per post, discussions often evolve into collaborative diagnostic sessions where seasoned contributors dissect variables like load-bearing calculations or moisture barriers. Peak activity on Friday evenings (10pm–12am UTC) aligns with users finalizing weekend project plans, reflecting its role as a last-minute verification resource. Uniquely, the sub’s strict adherence to text-based technical discourse, exclusion of image/video posts, and emphasis on verified solutions—evidenced by the relatively modest average upvotes (18.1) per post—foster an environment prioritizing utility over virality, distinguishing it from more visually driven home improvement spaces.
This sub holds significant value for both novice DIYers and trade professionals. Homeowners gain access to crowd-sourced risk assessment for complex tasks, reducing the likelihood of unsafe practices, while contractors and builders utilize it as a rapid peer-review forum for unconventional scenarios. The stringent quality controls—enforced through karma requirements and the DIY.StackExchange pipeline—filter out superficial queries, ensuring discussions remain technically rigorous. Consequently, r/HomeImprovement functions less as a showcase for finished projects and more as a critical safety net for residential work, where actionable, code-aware guidance directly impacts project outcomes and occupant safety. Its scale (4.7 million subscribers) demonstrates widespread reliance on this model for resolving real-world home improvement dilemmas.
r/HomeImprovement shows typical engagement for a community of this scale, with an average of 39.3 upvotes per post across its 4,763,268 members. The community is highly discussion-oriented, with a comment-to-upvote ratio of 2.51. To reach the Hot section of r/HomeImprovement, posts typically need at least 3 upvotes, reflecting the community's activity level.
Posts on r/HomeImprovement receive an average of 98.8 comments, indicating a highly engaged community where members actively participate in conversations rather than passively consuming content. This level of discussion is characteristic of communities that value dialogue and diverse perspectives.
Based on an analysis of 100 top posts from the past week, Friday is the most active day with 20 posts reaching the top, while Monday sees the least activity with 9 posts. Activity is fairly evenly distributed between weekdays and weekends.
The peak posting hours are around 8pm UTC (9 posts), 4pm UTC (8 posts), and 5pm UTC (6 posts). The quietest hours are 9am UTC, 8am UTC, and 10am UTC, with only 2-1 posts each reaching the top during these times.
Weekly breakdown: Monday (9), Tuesday (14), Wednesday (15), Thursday (12), Friday (20), Saturday (13), Sunday (17) posts reaching the top.
r/HomeImprovement currently has 4,763,268 subscribers. Over the past 30 days, the community has grown by 21,309 members (0.45%), averaging 687 new subscribers per day. This growth rate places r/HomeImprovement in the top 9% of all tracked subreddits.
Over the past 90 days, r/HomeImprovement has gained 53,754 subscribers (1.14%). Since tracking began 628 days ago, the community has added 357,605 total subscribers.
r/HomeImprovement is steadily growing, with 21,309 new members in the last 30 days.
r/HomeImprovement has 4,763,268 subscribers as of April 2026.
The best time to post on r/HomeImprovement is Fridays 8pm-10pm UTC, based on analysis of top-performing posts from the past week.
r/HomeImprovement is steadily growing, with 21,309 new members in the last 30 days.
r/HomeImprovement was created on August 18, 2008, making it 17 years old.
Posts on r/HomeImprovement typically need at least 3 upvotes to reach the Hot section.
r/HomeImprovement is a Reddit community with 4,763,268 subscribers. The community describes itself as: "Only text posts are allowed here. YOU MUST have minimum karma to participate in the sub. Submit here: https://diy.stackexchange.com/" The best time to post on r/HomeImprovement is Fridays 8pm-10pm UTC. Posts receive an average of 39.3 upvotes and 98.8 comments. The minimum upvotes needed to reach the Hot section is approximately 3. The subreddit is adding approximately 687 new members each day. Founded 17 years ago, r/HomeImprovement is tracked and analyzed by RedditList as part of its comprehensive database of over 106,351 subreddits.
Last updated: 2026-04-28 23:22:08