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Gbenga Odukoya
Gbenga Odukoya

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Best Online Communities for Indie Hackers in 2026

Finding the right community as an indie hacker is one of those things that looks easy from the outside and feels surprisingly hard once you are actually looking. There are hundreds of forums, Discords, Slacks, subreddits, and platforms that describe themselves as communities for indie hackers and founders. Most of them are either too noisy to extract any signal from, too quiet to feel worth the effort, or populated by people who are at a completely different stage than you are.

The communities that actually move the needle for indie hackers share a specific set of qualities. The people in them are genuinely building things, not just talking about building things. The feedback culture rewards honesty over politeness. The discussions are searchable and persistent, so something posted six months ago is still discoverable. And the audience is specific enough that when you share what you are working on, the people reading it actually understand what you are talking about.

Here are the communities that consistently deliver on those qualities in 2026.

1. Indie Hackers

Best for: Long-form progress updates, revenue transparency, and founder-to-founder feedback.

Indie Hackers is the original home base for bootstrapped founders and solo builders. Built by Courtland Allen and later acquired by Stripe, it has maintained its character as a place where founders share real numbers, real lessons, and real failures in a format that actually gets read.

The product interview format is what made Indie Hackers initially famous. Founders with working products walk through how they got their first users, what their revenue looks like, and what has been harder than expected. These interviews are still among the most honest pieces of founder content available anywhere.

The forum is where the ongoing community life happens. You can share a product update, ask a specific question about pricing or customer acquisition, or post a milestone and get responses from people who have faced the same problems. The audience skews toward software products, SaaS, and content businesses, which means the feedback you receive is from people who understand the mechanics of what you are building.

The strength of Indie Hackers is the quality of the long-form content and the searchability of the archive. A question about churn rates or cold email that someone asked two years ago likely has a thread of genuinely useful responses still sitting there waiting to be found.

Weakness: Activity levels in the main forum have softened compared to a few years ago as the community has spread across other platforms. The signal-to-noise ratio is still good but finding the most active conversations requires some navigation.

Best way to use it: Write a genuine progress post once a month. Answer questions in threads where you have direct experience. Read the product interviews systematically if you are early-stage.


2. Founders Today

Best for: Product discovery, launch visibility, and connecting with founders who are actively building.

Founders Today is a rising community in the indie hacker and startup builder space that has been gaining traction among founders who want a focused environment without the noise of larger platforms. The community is built specifically around product launches, founder updates, and early-stage builder discussions, which means the audience showing up there is concentrated in exactly the right demographic for most indie hackers.

What makes it worth paying attention to is the engagement quality relative to its size. Smaller, focused communities tend to produce better conversations than larger ones because the people there have more in common and less reason to perform for a broad audience. Founders Today sits in that category right now, while it is still early enough that showing up consistently puts you ahead of the crowd that will arrive later.

For an indie hacker launching a new product or looking for feedback from other builders, it is a community worth adding to the regular rotation alongside the more established names on this list.


3. Reddit — r/SaaS, r/startups, r/entrepreneur, r/indiehackers

Best for: Honest feedback, validation, and finding people who have solved the specific problem you are stuck on.

Reddit's startup-adjacent communities collectively represent one of the largest concentrations of builder feedback available anywhere online. The culture varies significantly by subreddit, but the common thread is that Reddit users are more willing to challenge your assumptions than most online communities.

r/SaaS is particularly useful for founders building subscription software products. Revenue discussions, churn problems, pricing strategy, and customer acquisition questions all get substantive responses from people running actual SaaS businesses.

r/startups is broader and works well for general founder questions. r/entrepreneur skews toward small business as much as tech startups but has useful discussions around bootstrapping, hiring, and operations. r/indiehackers mirrors some of the Indie Hackers forum content and is worth monitoring even if you are already active on the main site.

The self-promotion rules in most startup subreddits are strict, which is both a limitation and a feature. You cannot simply drop links and leave. You have to participate genuinely, which means the people who are active in these communities have usually been around long enough to have real experience to share.

Weakness: Content disappears quickly in the feed. A question posted yesterday is effectively invisible today unless it gained significant traction. The communities are also large enough that low-effort questions get ignored.

Best way to use it: Ask specific, narrow questions rather than broad ones. Participate in other people's threads before posting your own. Use the search function before posting something that has been covered extensively.


4. Product Hunt

Best for: Product launches, early adopter acquisition, and building initial social proof.

Product Hunt is where indie hackers go to launch. The platform surfaces new products daily to an audience of early adopters, investors, journalists, and other founders who are specifically there to discover and try new things. A strong launch day on Product Hunt can produce hundreds of signups, early reviews, and the kind of initial momentum that is genuinely hard to manufacture through other channels.

The community element beyond launch day is more limited. Product Hunt has discussion sections and a makers community, but the primary value for most indie hackers is the launch itself rather than ongoing community engagement.

The mechanics of a good Product Hunt launch have become well understood. Building a following on the platform before your launch, lining up supporters who will vote and comment on day one, and timing the launch for Tuesday through Thursday during US morning hours all make a meaningful difference to how high a product places.

Weakness: The audience is concentrated among the tech-savvy early adopter segment. If your product serves a mainstream audience, the people discovering you on Product Hunt may not be representative of your actual target customer. High placement on launch day also does not guarantee sustained traffic afterward.

Best way to use it: Treat it as a launch event, not an ongoing channel. Prepare weeks in advance. Engage personally with every comment on launch day.


5. Twitter/X — Indie Hacker and Builder Community

Best for: Building a personal audience around your product journey, finding collaborators, and staying current on what the builder community is discussing.

The indie hacker and vibe coder community on X is real and active, even as the platform's overall culture has shifted. The founders who have built the largest audiences there share a consistent approach: they document the journey honestly, post about specific problems and how they solved them, and engage genuinely with other builders rather than broadcasting into the void.

The distribution potential of X is higher than any other platform on this list. A single post from the right account at the right time can reach tens of thousands of people overnight. That same unpredictability is also the platform's central weakness for community building: the conversations are ephemeral, the algorithm is opaque, and the engagement that feels meaningful one week can disappear entirely the next.

For indie hackers, X works best as a distribution layer on top of a primary community rather than as a community itself. Share your Indie Hackers posts there. Announce your Product Hunt launches there. Engage with other builders there. But do not mistake follower count for community.

Best way to use it: Post consistently about the specific problem you are solving and how you are solving it. Engage with other builders genuinely. Use it to amplify content that lives somewhere more permanent.


2. Hacker News

Best for: Technical founders, developer products, and reaching a high-concentration audience of engineers and technical decision-makers.

Hacker News is not a community in the warm, welcoming sense of the word. It is a link aggregator and discussion forum run by Y Combinator where the comment culture is blunt, the standards are high, and a post that lands on the front page can send more traffic in 24 hours than most content efforts generate in a month.

For indie hackers building developer tools, technical products, or anything that appeals to a technically sophisticated audience, Hacker News is the highest-leverage community on this list. The "Show HN" post format lets you launch a product directly to an audience of developers and technical founders who will tell you exactly what they think about it, usually within an hour.

The feedback is not always pleasant. The HN audience has no patience for marketing language, vague value propositions, or products that do not work as described. But the founders who have gotten genuine traction from Show HN posts consistently describe the feedback as some of the most useful they received in their entire early-stage journey.

Weakness: The community is not designed for ongoing relationship building. You post, you get feedback, and then the conversation is over. Building a sustained presence requires posting consistently good content over a long period of time.

Best way to use it: Use "Show HN" for product launches and significant milestones. Submit genuinely interesting technical writing. Read the comments on your own posts carefully, even the harsh ones.


7. Slack and Discord Communities

Best for: Real-time conversations, niche founder groups, and async collaboration with a specific type of builder.

The niche Slack and Discord communities that have grown around specific topics, programming languages, product categories, or geographic regions have become some of the most valuable spaces for indie hackers in 2026. They are harder to find than the platforms listed above, but the conversations inside them are often more relevant than anything happening on a general forum.

Some worth knowing about: Online Geniuses for marketing and growth, Designer Hangout for product design, Ramen Club for bootstrapped SaaS founders, and various language-specific developer communities that often have channels dedicated to product discussions and founder feedback.

The limitation of Slack and Discord is discoverability. Conversations that happened two months ago are effectively inaccessible. The knowledge generated inside these communities does not compound over time the way a searchable forum does.

Best way to use it: Find two or three that match your specific niche rather than joining twenty and being active in none of them. Lurk for a week before contributing. Build relationships with specific people rather than broadcasting to the channel.


How to Actually Get Value From Any of These

Being a member of a community and getting value from it are different things. The founders who consistently benefit from online communities share one behavior: they give before they ask.

That means answering questions in threads where you have direct experience, sharing honest updates about what is working and what is not, and engaging with other people's launches and milestones before you need them to engage with yours.

The communities on this list have different cultures, different audiences, and different strengths. Pick two or three that match where you are right now and show up in them consistently. The connections and the feedback that matter will follow from that, not from being a passive member of fifteen platforms simultaneously.

Build in the open. Share what you know. Ask specific questions. The rest takes care of itself over time.

Top comments (4)

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publiflow profile image
PubliFlow

Solid list! I would add that the quality of a community matters more than the size. Some of the most valuable connections I have made as a builder came from smaller, focused groups rather than the massive forums. Dev.to has been surprisingly good for technical deep dives and getting feedback from other builders. The signal-to-noise ratio is better than most social platforms. Also found that engaging in conversations on other people posts rather than just promoting your own project tends to build much more meaningful connections.

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gbenga_odukoya_d9c8477163 profile image
Gbenga Odukoya

Thanks for you comment Public i had just one thought before making this post, the goal is to create a basic list while i keep updating the post as times goes on if you return back to this post in 3-4 days time it would have been updated, this is a way to create an ever green content, i could have just written all the communities at once but the value of the article would be equals to nothing.

Thanks once again for sharing your voice

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sam_kvz profile image
Sam T.

You forgot SaaS Community on discord, it’s kind of the new hub for SaaS founders active on discord

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gbenga_odukoya_d9c8477163 profile image
Gbenga Odukoya

Thanks i will include that also thanks for sharing