Facebook-sivun sitoutumisasteen laskuri
Mittaa, kuinka hyvin Facebook-sisältösi yhdistyy yleisöösi. Saat välittömät sitoutumisasteen laskelmat ja vertailu näkemyksiä.

Arvio Laskelmat perustuvat syötteisiisi. Tulokset ovat opettavaisia ja vertailuarvot ovat toimialan keskiarvoja.

Facebook-sivun sitoutumisasteen laskuri

Laske sitoutumisasteesi

Syötä sivusi mittarit alla saadaksesi välittömän analyysin.

Ilmainen työkalu. Ei rekisteröitymistä vaadita.

Mikä on Facebook-sivun sitoutumisaste?

Sitoutumisaste mittaa prosenttiosuuden yleisöstäsi, joka aktiivisesti vuorovaikuttaa sisältösi kanssa reaktioiden, kommenttien ja jakamisten kautta.

Korkeampi sitoutumisaste viittaa siihen, että sisältösi resonoi ja Facebookin algoritmi todennäköisemmin lisää tavoittavuuttasi.

Kuinka se lasketaan

Sitoutumisaste = (Reaktiot + Kommentit + Jako) / Seuraajat x 100

Tämä per-seuraaja kaava on yleisin vertailuarvo, jota sosiaalisen median markkinoijat ja toimistot käyttävät.

Vinkkejä sitoutumisen lisäämiseksi

Käytä Natiivivideoita

Natiiviset Facebook-videot saavat 2-3 kertaa enemmän sitoutumista kuin linkit ulkoisiin videopalveluihin.

Julkaise Kun Kohdeyleisösi On Aktiivinen

Käytä Sivun Näkymiä löytääksesi huippuaikavälejä ja aikatauluta julkaisut näihin aikoihin.

Herätä Keskustelua

Kysy kysymyksiä, jaa mielipiteitä ja vastaa kommentteihin, jotta keskustelut pysyvät elinvoimaisina.

Hyödynnä Facebook-ryhmiä

Rakenna yhteisö sivusi ympärille; ryhmät ylittävät jatkuvasti sivut tavoittavuudessa.

Facebook Engagement Rates by Industry (2026)

Facebook engagement rates vary wildly by vertical. A 0.4% rate is a disappointment in food and a strong number in B2B SaaS. Compare yourself to your own industry before deciding whether your page is performing well.

Media and entertainment: 0.20% - 0.55%

Volume-driven. Big pages with broad audiences. Reactions dominate; deeper engagement is rare. Anything above the midpoint of this band signals genuinely strong content.

Food and recipe: 0.40% - 1.20%

The highest-engaging mainstream category on Facebook. Saves and shares carry these numbers. A food page below 0.4% is underperforming structurally.

Beauty and fashion: 0.30% - 0.85%

Strong commenter culture, weak share behaviour. Stories and Reels carry the platform engagement here; static feed posts struggle.

Fitness and wellness: 0.45% - 1.30%

Driven by save-heavy workout content and community-building groups. Pages linked to a Group consistently outperform standalone pages by 2-3x.

Retail and e-commerce: 0.15% - 0.50%

Lower than people expect. Facebook organic reach for retail has been compressed by Marketplace and Shop tabs absorbing the buyer-intent signal. Most retail engagement now happens off-feed.

B2B SaaS and professional services: 0.10% - 0.35%

Tight audiences, slow-to-engage decision makers. Click-through rate matters more than likes in this segment - a 0.2% engagement page can outperform a 0.8% one on actual demo bookings.

Real estate and local services: 0.50% - 1.40%

Local pages benefit from neighbourhood social graph effects. The same content on a global page would get far less engagement; geography is doing the algorithmic work.

Nonprofit and advocacy: 0.60% - 1.80%

Highest engagement band on the platform. Mission-driven audiences are unusually willing to comment and share. Treat this as the absolute ceiling - most other categories cannot reach these numbers and should not benchmark against them.

Why Facebook Page Engagement Has Dropped (And What Still Works)

Organic Facebook engagement has been falling for ten years and accelerated again in 2024-2025. If your page used to do 2% and now does 0.4%, you are not doing anything wrong - the baseline moved. Three forces are responsible.

First, the Reels-first feed reweighting. Facebook now dedicates a much larger share of the feed to Reels surfaced from non-followed creators. Your page's static posts compete for fewer slots than they did in 2022. The fix: post Reels weekly, not as a side dish.

Second, the Groups-and-DMs shift. Meta's product team has been quietly steering social activity from the public feed into Messenger and Groups, where engagement is harder to measure but easier to retain. A page paired with an active Group consistently posts engagement rates 2-4x higher than a standalone page.

Third, the demographic skew. Younger audiences who engage at higher rates have largely moved to Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts. The remaining Facebook audience skews older, which lowers raw engagement rate even on great content. The honest read: rebuild engagement expectations around the audience that is actually there.

What still works in 2026: video-first content, especially short Reels with a tight hook. Live video, which gets 6x more interactions than recorded video. Question-led posts that ask for specific opinions. Pages with a linked active Group. Local content with geo-tagging. Pure link-out posts and reshared news are the worst-performing formats on the platform today.

How to Calculate the Engagement Rate of Any Facebook Page

The calculator above works for your own page where you know all the inputs. To check a competitor or partner page you don't own, do this:

  1. Get the public follower count from the page's About section (Facebook still displays this on most business pages).
  2. Pick the last 10 organic posts (skip boosted posts - the badge marks them - and skip posts under 48 hours old).
  3. Sum the visible reactions (all reaction types, not just likes), the comment count, and the share count for each post. Average the three across the 10 posts.
  4. Plug those averages and the follower count into the calculator above.
  5. Take the result with a small grain of salt - you cannot see post-click activity from the outside, so the real engagement rate is usually 10-15% higher than what the public math gives you. Useful for relative comparison, not for absolute precision.

Facebook vs Instagram Engagement Rate (Why You Cannot Compare Directly)

Marketing dashboards love to show Facebook and Instagram engagement rates next to each other. The numbers look comparable. They are not.

Instagram's algorithm reaches about 20-40% of followers per post; Facebook's reaches 2-5%. That difference alone makes the same engaged audience appear 5-10x less engaged on Facebook. A page that has a 0.5% Facebook engagement rate and a 2.5% Instagram engagement rate is performing about equally well in both places - it is just that Facebook is hiding more of the audience.

The honest cross-platform comparison: multiply your Facebook engagement rate by 5 before comparing to Instagram. If your Facebook rate times 5 still trails your Instagram rate, the content is genuinely Instagram-favoured. If they roughly match, your content works equally well in both places and you are simply seeing the platform-reach discount.

Reels are a partial exception. Facebook Reels reach much further than feed posts, so Reels engagement rates on Facebook are closer to Instagram ones. If you are looking at a Reels-only engagement rate, the cross-platform comparison gets fairer.

UKK

Usein Kysytyt
Kysymykset

Hyvä Facebook-sitoutumisaste on tyypillisesti 1 % ja 5 % välillä. Yli 5 % on erinomainen, kun taas alle 1 % viittaa siihen, että sisältösi tarvitsee työtä.

Sitoutumisaste on kokonaisvuorovaikutusten (reaktiot + kommentit + jaot) määrä jaettuna seuraajien kokonaismäärällä, kerrottuna 100:lla.

Alhainen sitoutuminen johtuu usein väärästä julkaisuajasta, heikoista visuaaleista, videosisällön puutteesta tai siitä, ettei vuorovaikutusta kannusteta. Kokeile uusia formaatteja ja julkaisuajankohtia.

Useimmat sivut hyötyvät 3-5 julkaisusta viikossa. Liian usein julkaiseminen voi laimentaa sitoutumista; liian harvoin ja algoritmi unohtaa sinut.

Ei. Tämä on manuaalinen laskin. Automaattiseen seurantaan, raporttien aikatauluttamiseen ja viestilaatikon automaatioon kokeile Inflowavea.

The cross-platform average sits at roughly 0.4% in 2026, down from about 0.6% in 2023. The drop is mostly driven by the Reels-first feed reweighting absorbing distribution previously given to page posts. Nonprofit and food categories run above this average; retail and B2B SaaS run below. A 0.4% engagement rate on a generic page is normal - not a problem to solve.

Yes - directly. Facebook's algorithm uses early-engagement velocity (reactions and comments in the first 60-90 minutes after posting) as the strongest signal for further distribution. A post that hits high engagement rate quickly gets shown to a larger share of followers and non-followers. A post that gets low engagement in that window gets capped, often never reaching more than 2-3% of your followers.

No. Page engagement rate averages across all posts and benchmarks against follower count. Post engagement rate is calculated for a single post against either follower count (ERF) or post reach (ERR). Reach-based post engagement rate is always higher than follower-based page engagement rate because it ignores followers who never saw the post. Use page engagement rate for portfolio-level diagnostics and post engagement rate for content-quality diagnostics.

Weekly is plenty for diagnostic purposes. Monthly is better for strategic decisions. Daily checking will drive you mad - Facebook engagement is noisy day-to-day because a single high-performing post or a single dud can swing the weekly number by 30%. Use a 10-post rolling window so trends emerge instead of post-to-post static.

Haluatko Lisätä Facebook-sitoutumistasi?

Inflowave automatisoi DM:t, kommentit ja seurannat, jotta sitoutumisasteesi pysyy kasvussa.

Engagement calculators by platform

Facebook ER runs lower than Instagram. Use the right benchmark for the right platform.

Facebook organic strategy reads

Guide

Best social media tools for agencies (2026)

Scheduling, analytics, automation - the layered stack that lifts ER across IG, Facebook, and TikTok.

Read article
Guide

DM automation tools that actually move ER

Higher comment-to-DM conversion lifts page ER because Facebook re-promotes commented posts.

Read article
Guide

Engagement to revenue: the social funnel

A 0.8% Facebook ER with the right funnel outperforms a 2% ER with no path to purchase.

Read article

Facebook engagement glossary

Reactions
The umbrella term for Facebook's like, love, care, haha, wow, sad, and angry buttons. All seven count equally in the engagement formula. Comments and shares are tracked separately.
Page Engagement Rate
Average reactions plus comments plus shares per post, divided by page followers, times 100. Always lower than Instagram because Facebook's feed prioritizes friends and groups over page content.
Organic reach
The percentage of page followers who see a post without paid promotion. On Facebook this is typically 2-5% per post - so a page with 50K followers reaches 1,000-2,500 organically per post.
Early-engagement velocity
Reactions and comments accumulated in the first 60-90 minutes after publishing. The strongest signal in Facebook's algorithm. A post that hits its first 50 engagements fast gets distributed wider; a slow starter caps at low single-digit reach.
Link post penalty
Facebook's observed pattern of reducing organic reach for posts containing external links. Native videos and image posts typically reach 3-5x more followers than link posts of equivalent quality.
Engagement bait
Posts explicitly asking for likes, comments, shares, or tags ("Like if you agree", "Share if you love it"). Facebook downranks these algorithmically. Quality engagement comes from the post itself, not the ask.