Modern LLMs owe their existence partly to Reddit, which provided them with a rich source of training data, and Reddit is now itself incorporating LLMs into its user experience.
The platform has introduced a “Highlights” feature that appears at the top of post comment sections and uses AI to distill the key points from user answers into a short, scannable summary. We spotted the feature on a r/trekkingIndia post asking about gear requirements for the Hampta Pass trek. The post had the usual spread of community answers below it, but right at the top sat an AI-generated box labelled “Highlights” — with bullet points pulling out the main advice: bag size recommendations, clothing choices, rain gear, essential accessories, and a note on buying ponchos locally. Each point was a tight one-line summary, and the section carried a small disclaimer reading “AI-generated from comments. Verify details.”

The feature is a natural extension of Reddit’s broader AI push. The company has been building toward this for some time — first with Reddit Answers, a standalone AI search tool that synthesizes responses from across the platform in response to queries, and more recently by signalling plans to integrate AI-powered summarization more deeply into the core search and browsing experience. CEO Steve Huffman has described Reddit’s 20-year archive of user conversations as a “massive corpus of information” that the company is only beginning to unlock. The Highlights feature is one visible expression of that.
What makes it worth noting is where it sits: not buried in a search results page, but right at the top of an ordinary thread. Anyone who opens a post — whether they were searching for something or just browsing — now encounters an AI summary before they read a single user comment. For communities built around practical advice, like trekking or personal finance or home repair subreddits, that’s a significant change in how information gets surfaced. The casual reader gets the gist immediately; the more invested reader can scroll down for the full discussion.
Reddit’s relationship with AI has not been without friction. The platform sued Anthropic last year for using its data to train models without authorization, having already reached separate data-licensing deals with OpenAI and Google. The irony of Reddit now deploying those same kinds of models to summarize its own content is not subtle. The platform that spent years being scraped by AI companies is now one of the more active deployers of AI on consumer internet.
The pattern here is also visible elsewhere. StackOverflow, another platform whose Q&A archive was central to LLM training, has seen its question volume collapse by roughly 90% since 2022 as developers switched to AI tools for answers. Reddit appears to be drawing the right lesson from that — by integrating AI into its own experience rather than watching users leave to get AI-generated answers somewhere else.
The Highlights box is labelled as AI-generated and carries a prompt to verify details, which is the right instinct for a feature dealing with advice on things like mountain treks, where bad information has real consequences. How well the summarization holds up across Reddit’s more complex and contested communities — politics, medicine, legal advice — will be a more interesting test of the feature than a gear checklist for a Himachal Pradesh trek.