Craigslist continues to dominate as the 40th most popular website in the United States, proving that radical simplicity and user privacy can outlast the aggressive, data-mining algorithms of the modern social media era. While Silicon Valley giants pivot toward AI-driven engagement and “clout-chasing” metrics, this 1990s-era classifieds site facilitates over 105 million monthly visits by offering something increasingly rare: a platform where anonymity is a feature, not a bug.
The Last Bastion of the Ungentrified Internet
In an age where platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and X (formerly Twitter) reward virality and public profiles, Craigslist remains a “utopian vision” of an earlier, more earnest internet. Jessa Lingel, an associate professor of communication at the University of Pennsylvania, describes the site as the “ungentrified” internet. Unlike Wikipedia or Reddit, which have recently integrated AI tools and modern visual updates, Craigslist maintains a skeletal design that prioritizes utility over aesthetics.
For devoted users like Koester, 42, the site is an essential part of daily life. She catalogs “harrowing images” from the free section for her Instagram followers but remains a “ride or die” loyalist to the platform itself. Koester argues that the site’s lack of “likes,” “shares,” and public ratings disincentivizes the performative behavior common on other marketplaces like DePop or Facebook Marketplace. “The real freaks come out on Craigslist,” Koester notes, citing a “purity” in its unfiltered interactions.
A Business Model Built on Privacy, Not Profiles
Craigslist effectively functions as a massive, decentralized community center. It serves as a launchpad for everything from romantic pursuits to casting experimental television projects, including HBO’s The Rehearsal and Amazon Freevee’s Jury Duty. This versatility stems from its refusal to track user movements or predict consumer desires.
Kat Toledo, a Los Angeles-based comedian and actor, has used the site for two decades to find housing, romance, and even her current full-time role as an assistant to a forensic psychologist. Despite the site’s lingering reputation for “sketchy” encounters or scammers, Toledo values the “random factor” that connects her with people outside her typical social circle. “When something is structured so simply and really does serve the community, and it doesn’t ask for much? That’s what survives,” Toledo says.
High Profits Without Harvesting Data
Despite a reported dip in revenue over the last six years, Craigslist remains enormously profitable. The company generates income through modest fees for job postings, specific goods, and apartment listings in select cities. Unlike “Web 2.0” companies that monetize user data, Craigslist grants users total autonomy. According to Similarweb data, the site maintains its massive traffic without spending a single dollar on traditional marketing or advertising.
Defying Corporate Takeovers to Preserve 90s Values
The site’s survival is no accident; it is the result of a deliberate, decade-long legal battle. Founders Craig Newmark and CEO Jim Buckmaster fought a hostile takeover attempt by eBay, which had acquired a minority stake in 2004. The litigation concluded in 2015, with Craigslist successfully repurchasing its shares to regain full control. This move ensured the company remained untethered from corporate interests that might demand aggressive monetization or data harvesting.
Even as the platform evolves—such as the 2018 removal of “casual encounters” and the personals section following federal anti-sex trafficking legislation—its core ethos remains unchanged. The “missed connections” section persists, and the site continues to operate on the same principles of accessibility and privacy established during its 1995 inception as a San Francisco email list. For its most loyal users, Craigslist isn’t just a website; it is a permanent, uncorruptible fixture of the digital landscape.
