Is There Actually Any Money Left in Myspace in 2026?

kingkong2222

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Besides nostalgia, is anyone still monetizing Myspace traffic? Curious if there are hidden angles like music promotion, niche traffic funnels, or SEO plays that still make it worth exploring
 
Myspace is no longer attractive for generating traffic. Its user base is much lower than before, so using other platforms would be a better option.
 
Myspace's dwindling user base makes it a tough sell for direct traffic monetization, but I've found that leveraging its nostalgic value can still yield results in specific niches. Focusing on 90s and early 2000s music promotion, I've managed to drive targeted traffic to affiliate offers and even generated some sales. By creating content around retro music trends and optimizing for long-tail keywords, I've seen a 25% conversion rate on a small but dedicated audience, with earnings averaging $150 per month from a single affiliate program.
 
Besides nostalgia, is anyone still monetizing Myspace traffic? Curious if there are hidden angles like music promotion, niche traffic funnels, or SEO plays that still make it worth exploring
nobody is monetizing Myspace traffic in 2026 — even besides nostalgia. The platform is 100% dead. Real monthly active users are under 1 million (mostly inactive old profiles + bots), traffic is basically zero, and backlinks have zero SEO value. Even music artists get almost no plays or fans anymore. There are no hidden angles left. Everyone moved to TikTok, Instagram Reels, and SoundCloud years ago.Save your time — Myspace is not worth exploring at all.
 
there is basically no real money left in Myspace in 2026 for most people.
You can technically still try to monetize it—but it’s more like a nostalgia experiment or micro-niche traffic play, not a real business channel
 
Honestly I tried a tiny Myspace experiment last year, just to see what would happen. The traffic was basically non existent beyond a few nostalgic fans. I did learn that a niche topic with loyal fans can sometimes respond to retro content, but its not a reliable income source. I would skip chasing ROI on Myspace in 2026.
 
Besides nostalgia, is anyone still monetizing Myspace traffic? Curious if there are hidden angles like music promotion, niche traffic funnels, or SEO plays that still make it worth exploring
myspace traffic is very low compared to modern platforms
 
Honestly not really, myspace still exists but traffic is very low compared to before and most users are not active. it is more like a leftover platform now, mainly used for music and nostalgia.
 
No, not really worth it.
Myspace has very low traffic today, so monetization opportunities are minimal.
  • Music promotion: possible, but weaker than Spotify or SoundCloud
  • SEO / backlinks: little to no value
  • Traffic funnels: not scalable
 
Honestly, I do not see much opportunity with Myspace anymore. The traffic is very limited compared to other platforms. Maybe it could still work for very specific niches like music, but for most cases, new platforms seem more worth the time.
 
Traffic on Myspace seems pretty limited now, so monetization opportunities are smaller compared to other platforms. Maybe still useful for niche music promotion, but overall it feels more experimental than reliable in 2026.
 
Myspace is not dead financially, but the money is in exploiting is leftover web authority, not building a social following there.
 
Besides nostalgia, is anyone still monetizing Myspace traffic? Curious if there are hidden angles like music promotion, niche traffic funnels, or SEO plays that still make it worth exploring
I’ve tried a few marketing campaigns on Myspace to explore something new for my strategy, but the results were not very effective.
 
It's insignificant and people hardly talk about it. There are better social media platforms now that are worth the time.
 
I only remember My Space existence because there are tons of bots on BHW talking about this shit
 
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