CRYPTOREPORTCLUB
  • Crypto news
  • AI
  • Technologies
Saturday, August 2, 2025
No Result
View All Result
CRYPTOREPORTCLUB
  • Crypto news
  • AI
  • Technologies
No Result
View All Result
CRYPTOREPORTCLUB

Threads users still barely click links

July 14, 2025
150
0

Two years in, Threads is starting to look more and more like the most viable challenger to X. It passed 350 million monthly users earlier this year and Mark Zuckerberg has predicted it could be Meta's next billion-user app.

But Threads still isn't sending much traffic to other websites, which could make the platform less appealing for creators, publishers and others whose businesses depend on non-Meta owned websites. According to Similarweb, a marketing intelligence firm, outbound referral traffic from Threads climbed to 28.4 million visits in June. That's a notable jump from 15.1 million visits a year ago, but still relatively tiny considering Threads is currently averaging more than 115 million users a day on its app, according to Similarweb.

Related Post

Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash

Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash

August 1, 2025
T-Mobile now officially owns UScellular

T-Mobile now officially owns UScellular

August 1, 2025

Regular Threads users have long suspected that Meta deprioritizes posts with links. For most of the last two years of Threads' existence the common wisdom was that users shouldn't share links, or should only share them as replies to a primary post. Instagram chief Adam Mosseri, who also oversees Threads, hasn't exactly encouraged linking either. He said last year that Threads doesn't intentionally downrank links but that "we don’t place much value on" them because "people don’t like and comment on links much."

Threads' outbound referrals from launch through June 2025.

Meta's reluctance wasn't just about users' preferences, though. The company was also concerned about how spammers and other bad actors might abuse links on the text-based platform. More recently though, Meta has changed course, and has been taking steps to surface more "good" links in recommended posts.

"We’ve been working on making sure links are ranked properly," Mosseri said in June. "Links have been working much better for more than a month now." The company has also bolstered links on the platform by allowing users to add more links to their Threads profiles and providing link-specific analytics to its "insights" feature. "We want Threads to be a place that helps you grow your reach – even outside of Threads," Meta said in a May update.

But despite these changes, Threads is still sending very little traffic to websites. Data shared by Similarweb shows that during May and June of last year — when Threads had more than 150 million monthly users — it sent just 24.8 million referrals to outside websites. During May and June of this year, that number more than doubled, rising to 51.8 million.

Those numbers still suggest, though, that the majority of Threads' users are rarely, if ever, clicking on links they see on Threads. Lia Haberman, a social media marketing consultant and author of the ICYMI newsletter, said she's not surprised. "People just got trained not to look for them, not to include them, not to think about them," she tells Engadget. "You can't just flip a switch and all of a sudden expect people to embrace links."

Publishers, a group that likely posts more links on Threads than anyone else, don't seem to be seeing significant traffic from Threads either. Data provided by Chartbeat, a company that provides analytics data to publishers, shows that publisher page views from Threads have nearly doubled since the start of the year, rising from 8.8 million in January to 15.1 million in June.

Interestingly, according to both Similarweb and Chartbeat's data for 2025, referrals from Threads peaked in March. That month, Threads sent 28.8 million outbound referrals to websites, according to Similarweb, while Chartbeat publishers saw 25 million page views from the platform.

Threads page views over time.

But while the latest stats show that traffic from Threads has grown significantly over the last year, it still represents a tiny proportion of the publishers' traffic overall. According to Chartbeat, over the last year and a half Threads has consistently accounted for less than one tenth of a percent of sites' referral traffic. By comparison, Facebook referrals have hovered around 2 – 3 percent over the same period, while Google Discover has accounted for about 13 – 14 percent of referrals. Even among other "small" sources of referrals, like chatGPT, Reddit and Perplexity, Threads is only ahead of Perplexity in terms of the number of referrals it sends.

Threads referrals even pale in comparison to Twitter's, which was never known as a major traffic driver even before Elon Musk's takeover of the company. In January of 2018, Twitter accounted for 3 percent of publishers' page views, according to Chartbeat data reported by the Press Gazette. By April of 2023, after Musk's takeover but before he rebranded the site to X, that number had fallen to 1.2 percent.

Chartbeat's data isn't a complete picture — stats provided to Engadget were based on an analysis of 3,000 sites that have opted in to anonymized data sharing — but the slight increase in referral traffic roughly lines up with another major change Meta made this year. In January, following Mark Zuckerberg's move to end fact checking and walk back content moderation rules, Threads also ended its moratorium on recommending political content to all users.

Following this change, some publishers of political news, including Newsweek, Politico and Forbes saw a spike in referrals from Threads, Digiday reported. But those gains don't seem to be universal, and it's not clear why some publishers may be benefitting more than others. "Threads is trailing significantly in traffic, subscription conversions, and overall conversion rate," compared with Bluesky and X, the Boston Globe's VP of Platforms Mark Karolian recently shared on Threads.

While Threads' growth so far hasn't been hampered by its inability to drive users off-platform, it could become an increasingly important issue for Meta if it really wants to bring more creators onto the platform. The company is also getting ready to flip the switch on ads on the platform. A user base that ignores links could complicate Meta's pitch to advertisers, who are already taking a cautious approach to Threads. Meta declined to comment.

Haberman says that Threads' ambivalence toward links might be symptomatic of a larger identity crisis the platform is still facing. It has a large user base, but it's not always clear who Threads is really for. It isn't known as a destination to follow breaking news, like Twitter once was, or as a place with highly-engaged subcultures, she notes. "Threads needs to have a purpose," she says. "And right now, it seems very much like a suggestion box at work where people are just filing complaints and trauma dumping."

Whether smaller platforms like Threads can reliably drive traffic to websites is an increasingly urgent question. At a time when online search feels like it's getting worse, AI is rapidly replacing many searches and cannibalizing websites' search traffic. Publishers, as The Wall Street Journal recently reported, are being hit especially hard by these shifts.

Threads is extremely unlikely to fill those gaps on its own, even if referral traffic vastly improves. And publishers in particular have plenty of reasons not to become too reliant on a Meta-owned platform. At the same time, there's clearly an opportunity for Threads to play a bigger role in a post-search world. That would not only benefit the creators, publishers and small business owners Meta has long courted, it could help Threads establish an identity of its own.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/threads-users-still-barely-click-links-170139103.html?src=rss

Share212Tweet133ShareShare27ShareSend

Related Posts

Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash
Technologies

Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash

August 1, 2025
0

A jury in Florida has found Tesla partially liable for a 2019 crash involving the company's Autopilot self-driving feature, The Washington Post reports. As a result, the company will have to pay $43 million in compensatory damages and even more in punitive damages. Autopilot comes pre-installed on Tesla's cars and...

Read moreDetails
T-Mobile now officially owns UScellular

T-Mobile now officially owns UScellular

August 1, 2025
Some goo.gl URLs will live to fight another day

Some goo.gl URLs will live to fight another day

August 1, 2025
Nintendo has sold over 6 million Switch 2s but still can’t keep up with demand

Nintendo has sold over 6 million Switch 2s but still can’t keep up with demand

August 1, 2025
The HORI Piranha Plant camera for Switch 2 drops to $40

The HORI Piranha Plant camera for Switch 2 drops to $40

August 1, 2025
Nintendo sold 5.82 million Switch 2s in 7 weeks but still can’t keep up with demand

Nintendo sold 5.82 million Switch 2s in 7 weeks but still can’t keep up with demand

August 1, 2025
Lyft completes its $197 million acquisition of Europe’s Freenow

Lyft completes its $197 million acquisition of Europe’s Freenow

August 1, 2025

Recent News

Athene Network Migrates from Ethereum to Binance Smart Chain

August 1, 2025
Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash

Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash

August 1, 2025

Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Sink as Crypto Liquidations Top $900 Million

August 1, 2025
T-Mobile now officially owns UScellular

T-Mobile now officially owns UScellular

August 1, 2025

TOP News

  • Tech’s greatest winners in 2024

    Tech’s greatest winners in 2024

    537 shares
    Share 215 Tweet 134
  • The AirPods 4 are still on sale at a near record low price

    535 shares
    Share 214 Tweet 134
  • Ripple Partners With Ctrl Alt to Expand Custody Footprint Into Middle East

    535 shares
    Share 214 Tweet 134
  • Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition comes to the Mac on July 17

    535 shares
    Share 214 Tweet 134
  • HBO confirms The Last of Us season 3 will arrive in 2027

    535 shares
    Share 214 Tweet 134
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Advertising: digestmediaholding@gmail.com

Disclaimer: Information found on cryptoreportclub.com is those of writers quoted. It does not represent the opinions of cryptoreportclub.com on whether to sell, buy or hold any investments. You are advised to conduct your own research before making any investment decisions. Use provided information at your own risk.
cryptoreportclub.com covers fintech, blockchain and Bitcoin bringing you the latest crypto news and analyses on the future of money.

© 2023-2025 Cryptoreportclub. All Rights Reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Crypto news
  • AI
  • Technologies

Disclaimer: Information found on cryptoreportclub.com is those of writers quoted. It does not represent the opinions of cryptoreportclub.com on whether to sell, buy or hold any investments. You are advised to conduct your own research before making any investment decisions. Use provided information at your own risk.
cryptoreportclub.com covers fintech, blockchain and Bitcoin bringing you the latest crypto news and analyses on the future of money.

© 2023-2025 Cryptoreportclub. All Rights Reserved