How to Use Flair on Reddit (And Why It Gets Posts Removed)
Flair is a label that helps a subreddit categorize posts (Question, Discussion, News, Help, etc.). Many communities require it. Missing or wrong flair is a common reason posts get removed by AutoModerator.
- What is flair? A category label for your post or your profile (subreddit-specific).
- Why removals happen? Some subs auto-remove posts without the required flair.
- Fix: choose the correct flair before posting and follow local rules.
On this page
What flair is (post flair vs user flair)
A label attached to your post. It helps the community categorize topics (Question, Help, Discussion, etc.).
A label next to your username inside a specific subreddit (e.g., your role, experience, region). Not all subs use it.
Why flair causes removals
Many subreddits use AutoModerator rules to enforce organization. If flair is required and missing, posts may be removed automatically. Some subs also require a specific flair for certain topics (e.g., “Help” for support questions).
How to choose the right flair (quick method)
- Look at top posts from the last month and note the common flair types.
- Match your intent: Question vs Discussion vs News vs Help.
- Follow title rules if the flair implies a format (e.g., [Help]).
If you’re unsure, pick the flair most top posts use for the same type of content, then add a clear summary in the body.
Fix checklist if your post was removed
- Read the removal message (it often says “missing flair”).
- Check the subreddit rules and pinned posts.
- Repost only if allowed, with the correct flair and a better title/summary.
- If unclear, ask mods politely: Modmail Templates.
Next step
Read next: How to Write a Good Reddit Title (Examples + Templates).
FAQ
Do all subreddits require flair?
No. Some do, some don’t. Always check local rules and the posting form.
Can I change flair after posting?
Often yes, but it depends on the subreddit and platform. Some subs lock flair choices or use AutoModerator rules.
Will wrong flair reduce visibility?
Yes. Wrong flair can lead to removals or lower engagement because users filter content by flair.