In a significant shift for Snapchat, long known for private messaging, the platform is formally introducing “Topic Chats” — public discussion threads centered around trending events and interests. According to the company’s official announcement, users in Canada, New Zealand and the United States will begin seeing the feature roll out across the app in places like Chat shortcuts, Search, Stories and Spotlight videos. Profiles will remain hidden from non-friends to limit unwanted contact, and the company says it will use a mix of LLM-powered moderation and human oversight to keep the conversations safe and appropriate. The move represents a strategic attempt by Snap Inc. to expand beyond friend-to-friend chat, tapping into broader social discourse and boosting engagement (news.X). Key industrial observers note that the feature may also unlock fresh advertising and data-insights opportunities, though execution will be critical in balancing safety and scale.
Sources: Snap.com, Social Media Today
Key Takeaways
– Snap is shifting from its private-only messaging identity toward public, interest-based chats, representing a strategic inflection point for the brand.
– Privacy safeguards — such as hiding usernames and keeping profiles non-searchable by strangers — are baked in, highlighting the company’s effort to maintain its safety promise even as it opens up public conversation.
– From a business standpoint, Topic Chats may offer new avenues for ad targeting, community engagement and deeper user-data usage, but the risk of moderation failures or user backlash remains elevated.
In-Depth
For years, Snapchat built its brand on ephemeral snaps, private conversations and a friend-centric design. But on November 17, 2025, its parent company announced the launch of “Topic Chats” — a public chat format that allows users to join open discussions around trending events, fandoms and shared interests. This development marks a meaningful pivot for Snapchat, signaling that the business is ready to play in the broader arena of public social discourse rather than remaining locked into private messaging.
In the official blog post, Snapchat executives note that while the app has always emphasized private connection, they recognized how users were increasingly commenting publicly in the Spotlight feed. Rather than ignore that behavior, the company decided to formalize it, building Topic Chats into multiple surfaces of the app: Chat shortcuts, Search, Stories, and Spotlight videos. The “Join the Chat” yellow button is now the entry point into these interest-based rooms, which can cover topics as diverse as Formula 1 racing or reality-TV shows like Below Deck.
Yet while the feature opens up a new public dimension, Snapchat’s approach retains strong privacy and safety features. Users’ display names (not searchable usernames) appear in Topic Chats, and non-friends cannot tap through to a profile. The company emphasises human-review plus automated moderation (including LLM-based tools) to enforce community guidelines. Messages in Topic Chats will remain viewable — up to five years, in fact — and participants can leave quietly without broadcast notification.
From a strategic perspective, Topic Chats offer Snapchat fresh opportunities. For one, they help the platform compete more directly with other social networks that offer public conversation spaces, tapping into the “interest graph” rather than just the friends-graph. That interest-based engagement supports deeper ad targeting, potentially higher time-spent metrics and richer data signals. For marketers and creators, this means new channels — brand-driven chats, creator-led interest segments and integrated video-chat-story experiences.
However, this transition is not without risk. Public chat rooms bring heightened moderation challenges, potential exposure to harmful or inappropriate content, and a possible clash with the core users who have long viewed Snapchat as a more private space. The early rollout in only three countries — Canada, New Zealand and the United States — reflects the company’s caution, allowing it to iterate before global scale. Monitoring how engagement evolves, how advertisers respond and how user sentiment shifts will be pivotal for Snap’s growth thesis.
For users, the change is meaningful: instead of only talking to friends, Snapchatters can now join large-scale conversations about shared passions, discovering peers and content in new ways. At the same time, Snapchat tries to preserve its identity — fun, fast, visual and private-first — even as it adds a public layer. Whether this duality succeeds remains to be seen, but for now the world of Snap is opening up.

