Content types on Nextdoor

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What should you post on Nextdoor this week? A coupon? A photo? A long update about your team retreat three states away? Most local businesses guess, post once, and wonder why nothing happens. The answer is not a magic template. It is a small set of content types that fit how neighbors actually use the feed.

Nextdoor content strategy means choosing formats that earn trust, matching them to local timing, and keeping a rhythm neighbors can predict without feeling marketed to. This chapter covers the post types that work, how often to publish, and how to balance helpful updates with business goals.

What content types work on Nextdoor?

Four formats cover most local business needs. Helpful tips lead with information: how to winterize pipes, what to check after a hailstorm, or which permits a small renovation needs in your city. You mention your service only when it directly answers the problem.

Local event support shows you belong in the community: sponsoring a school drive, sharing a food bank need, or congratulating a neighborhood milestone. The business name appears as a participant, not the headline.

Service updates cover hours changes, seasonal availability, new staff, or expanded service area. Keep them factual and short. Neighbors save this kind of post for later when they need you.

Offers and announcements belong in the mix, but sparingly. One clear offer per month often outperforms weekly discount posts that train neighbors to scroll past you.

How often should you post?

One to three posts per week is a solid range for most local businesses. Daily posting rarely helps unless you are sharing genuinely urgent local information during a storm or outage. Consistency matters more than volume. A Tuesday tip and a Thursday community note beat seven rushed promos.

Batch your planning monthly. Map school breaks, holidays, weather patterns, and local events in your area, then slot content types against those dates. A lawn care company posts aeration reminders in early fall. A restaurant posts holiday hours the week before travelers start planning.

Leave room to respond. If a neighbor asks for recommendations in your category, a thoughtful public reply can outperform any scheduled post. Monitor notifications and treat replies as content, not chores.

How to balance helpful and promotional content

Use a simple ratio: at least three helpful or community posts for every one promotional post. Helpful means a neighbor could benefit even if they never hire you. Promotional means you are asking for a visit, call, or purchase.

Write like a neighbor who happens to run a business. Name streets, landmarks, or local conditions when relevant. "We are extending hours on Main Street during the street fair Saturday" beats "Big sale this weekend" with no local anchor.

Pair your plan with visual strategy on Nextdoor for images that read on mobile, and with how the Nextdoor algorithm works so you understand why helpful posts travel farther than sales copy.

Frequently asked questions

Can you repost the same content you use on other social channels?

Should businesses post in neighbor groups or only on their page?

What length works best for Nextdoor business posts?

How do you handle negative comments on a post?

Can you schedule Nextdoor posts in advance?

Where should neighbors go for more detail after a helpful post?