Social-networking platform Bluesky recently announced it has reached 40 million registered users, a significant milestone in its quest to position itself as a credible alternative to larger players in the micro-blogging world.
Bluesky’s growth has been impressive given its origins: launched in invite-only form in February 2023 and opening to the public in 2024, the platform saw rapid uptake in certain periods, including a surge to 15 million users after the U.S. election in late 2024.
Yet the milestone of 40 million is more beyond symbolic than a sign of parity with the giants.
Consider the benchmarks: X (formerly Twitter) boasts a global user base in the hundreds of millions, with estimates often cited at ~600 million users.
Meanwhile Facebook continues to maintain over a billion active users globally, offering the broadest reach. Bluesky’s 40 million is still a fraction, reflecting both scale challenges and slower feature roll-out.
Achieving 40 million registered users is no small feat, so it signals that Bluesky has moved past invite-only novelty. It has won attention, established base adoption, and now enters a phase where retention, engagement and monetisation become critical.
Moreover, the milestone comes alongside new feature roll-outs (such as a “Dislike” button) designed to boost personalization and feed quality.
Bluesky’s rise to 40 million users is commendable, but it still remains far behind X and Facebook in scale, features and monetisation readiness. For Bluesky, there is a crucial need to deepen engagement, broaden creator appeal, and show it can sustain growth beyond the hype-driven moments when users defect from rivals.