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AppsMetaTechThreads

Meta adds communities to Threads for topic focused conversations

Threads communities feature pinned posts, member labels, and custom reaction emojis to create a more interactive and identity-driven social environment.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Oct 3, 2025, 6:59 AM EDT
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Threads communities interface
Image: Threads / Meta
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Threads is rolling out a feature that puts a simple idea back into social media: give people a place to hang out around what they actually care about. Starting this week, Threads is testing Communities across its web and mobile apps — dedicated spaces for topics like pro basketball, K-pop, books, TV, AI and more — where posts about that subject will be surfaced in their own feeds and members can visibly wear that affiliation on their profile.

What it is

Think of Communities as the topic-specific rooms inside Threads. Each community gets its own feed you can follow, a label on members’ profiles so others can see they belong, and a few small but unmistakable flourishes — like a community-specific emoji for the “like” button (books get a stack of books, basketball gets a ball, etc.). Threads says Communities build on the app’s existing Topics and custom feeds, and will initially be available across more than a hundred of the platform’s most popular interests.

Threads’ take is deliberately curated: these communities are being created and rolled out by Meta, not spontaneously spawned by users in the same way some other platforms let groups proliferate. That matters because it changes the dynamics — you get a cleaner on-ramp to topic discovery, but you also get Meta’s fingerprints on what topics get a space and how they’re organized.

How it works day-to-day

You’ll be able to search for communities on Threads; if a topic has a community, you’ll see a three-dot badge next to that tag that signals the dedicated space exists. Join a community and its posts get pinned into your feeds menu, and your profile shows the membership so other users can see where you hang out. Posts that appear in a community feed are a mix — some are posted directly into the community, and others are regular Threads posts that the system has identified as topical and surfaced into the space.

Meta says the company will keep iterating on ranking inside communities and the main “For You” feed so the posts you see are more relevant as the feature learns what people actually engage with. There are also feature hooks coming: Threads, teased badges for the most active community members and other community-centric tools down the line.

Why Meta is doing this

At a basic level, Communities is about discovery and retention. Public timelines are messy; topic rooms reduce the noise-to-signal ratio and give lurkers a clearer path to content they care about. For Threads, which has been racing to carve out space against rivals and build a habit, a structured set of interest hubs is an obvious lever to lift engagement. Tech writers have already framed the move as a direct posture toward features on rival platforms that also stitch people together around topics.

There’s another layer: labeling membership on profiles subtly nudges identity formation. If your profile shows the communities you belong to, your feed and your interactions are contexted — that can strengthen micro-cultures inside the app, which is great for conversation, and trickier for moderation and reputation. Meta’s own leadership has been public about wanting Threads to host focused conversations without reproducing some of the worst cruft of larger public timelines; Communities is one of the tools they’re using to try to do that. Adam Mosseri and other members of the team have been vocal about the feature and its promise.

Communities isn’t a radical reinvention; it’s a logical next step for an app trying to move people from passively scrolling to actively conversing. By packaging topic rooms, membership labels and a handful of identity cues (hello, custom like emojis), Threads is making a bet that users want clearer places to gather — and that giving those places a little structure will be enough to keep conversations focused and feed recommendations useful. Whether it becomes a defining part of Threads’ social fabric depends on the details of rollout, moderation, and whether people actually choose to belong.


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