r/facepalm peaks Mondays 7pm-9pm UTC
r/facepalm was created on August 28, 2009, making it 16 years and 10 months old and one of the earliest subreddits on Reddit. With 8,102,047 members, this is a large and well-established subreddit with significant reach and influence on Reddit.
r/facepalm is slowly growing, with 2,035 new members in the last 30 days.
r/facepalm functions as a large-scale digital repository for expressions of secondhand embarrassment, exasperation, and disbelief, centered around real-world or documented incidents. While its stated purpose is sharing "silly, cringey, and embarrassing moments," the community's essence lies in the collective ritual of communal wincing. Content consistently features genuine, often mundane human errors, social faux pas, blatant illogical behavior, or moments of profound obliviousness captured in photos, videos, or news clips – deliberately excluding memes, breaking news, and internal Reddit drama per strict rules. The remarkably low barrier for trending posts (requiring zero upvotes) underscores a focus on immediate visceral reaction over curated popularity, fostering an environment where raw, relatable awkwardness resonates more than polished content. This dynamic, coupled with peak activity during Monday evening UTC hours, suggests the subreddit serves as a shared cathartic outlet, particularly as users process the frustrations of the workweek's start.
The discussion within r/facepalm typically revolves around dissecting the shared moment's inherent absurdity or poor judgment, often with a tone of weary amusement or sympathetic cringe rather than outright mockery. Comments frequently analyze *why* a situation is embarrassing, speculate on the subject's possible thought process, or draw parallels to common, relatable mishaps. The high average comment count (349.5) relative to the substantial upvote average (10,022.3) indicates active engagement beyond passive consumption; users actively participate in the communal acknowledgment of shared human fallibility. The strict prohibition against memes and news ensures the content remains grounded in tangible, often personal, experiences of embarrassment, distinguishing it from subs focused on internet culture or current events.
r/facepalm's uniqueness stems from its massive scale (over 8 million subscribers) combined with a tightly maintained thematic focus and low barrier to entry for visibility. This scale allows it to catalog an exceptionally diverse range of cringe-worthy scenarios while the enforced rules prevent thematic drift into mockery or controversy. It provides significant value as a low-stakes space for users seeking relatable, apolitical commiseration over universal human imperfections. Individuals navigating daily frustrations, those who appreciate dark humor derived from harmless folly, or anyone needing a reminder of shared vulnerability amidst online discourse would find the subreddit a consistently accessible wellspring of cathartic, unpretentious schadenfreude-lite. Its enduring popularity reflects a fundamental human tendency to seek connection through the shared experience of embarrassment.
r/facepalm shows very high engagement relative to its size, with an average of 11015.8 upvotes per post across its 8,102,047 members. The community is primarily content-consumption focused, with a comment-to-upvote ratio of 0.05. To reach the Hot section of r/facepalm, posts typically need at least 2,756 upvotes, reflecting the community's activity level.
Posts on r/facepalm receive an average of 534.4 comments, indicating a community that primarily engages through upvoting content. Posts tend to be appreciated more through voting than through discussion in the comments.
Based on an analysis of 11 top posts from the past week, Monday is the most active day with 4 posts reaching the top, while Thursday sees the least activity with 1 posts. Weekday activity is higher than weekends, suggesting a more professionally-oriented community.
The peak posting hours are around 7pm UTC (3 posts), 9pm UTC (2 posts), and 8am UTC (2 posts). The quietest hours are 8pm UTC, 5pm UTC, and 6pm UTC, with only 1-1 posts each reaching the top during these times.
Weekly breakdown: Monday (4), Tuesday (0), Wednesday (2), Thursday (1), Friday (2), Saturday (1), Sunday (1) posts reaching the top.
r/facepalm currently has 8,102,047 subscribers. Over the past 30 days, the community has grown by 2,035 members (0.03%), averaging 68 new subscribers per day. This growth rate places r/facepalm in the top 80% of all tracked subreddits.
Over the past 90 days, r/facepalm has gained 8,934 subscribers (0.11%). Since tracking began 653 days ago, the community has added -164,706 total subscribers. Growth has been accelerating recently compared to the longer-term trend.
r/facepalm is slowly growing, with 2,035 new members in the last 30 days.
r/facepalm has 8,102,047 subscribers as of July 2026.
The best time to post on r/facepalm is Mondays 7pm-9pm UTC, based on analysis of top-performing posts from the past week.
r/facepalm is slowly growing, with 2,035 new members in the last 30 days.
r/facepalm was created on August 28, 2009, making it 16 years old.
Posts on r/facepalm typically need at least 2,756 upvotes to reach the Hot section.
r/facepalm is a Reddit community with 8,102,047 subscribers. The community describes itself as: "Facepalm🤦🏻♂️ for silly, cringey, and embarrassing moments. Do not post memes, breaking news, or Reddit screenshots." The best time to post on r/facepalm is Mondays 7pm-9pm UTC. Posts receive an average of 11015.8 upvotes and 534.4 comments. The minimum upvotes needed to reach the Hot section is approximately 2,756. The subreddit is adding approximately 68 new members each day. Founded 16 years ago, r/facepalm is tracked and analyzed by RedditList as part of its comprehensive database of over 106,362 subreddits.
Last updated: 2026-07-07 23:47:12