Engagement Rate Calculator

Calculate your engagement rate

Enter your Instagram metrics. Get your engagement rate and see how you compare.

Industry benchmarks

Average Instagram engagement rates by follower count tier (2026 data).

TierFollowersAvg. Engagement Rate
Nano1K - 10K4% - 6%
Micro10K - 50K2% - 4%
Mid-tier50K - 500K1% - 2.5%
Macro500K - 1M0.8% - 1.5%
Mega1M+0.5% - 1%

What is Instagram Engagement Rate?

Instagram engagement rate measures how actively your audience interacts with your content relative to your follower count. It accounts for likes, comments, shares, and saves - the four primary engagement signals that Instagram's algorithm uses to determine content quality and reach.

A higher engagement rate indicates that your content resonates with your audience and that your followers are genuinely interested in what you post. Brands and marketers use engagement rate as a key metric when evaluating influencer partnerships and content strategy effectiveness.

How to Calculate Engagement Rate

The standard formula for Instagram engagement rate is:

Engagement Rate = ((Likes + Comments + Shares + Saves) / Followers) x 100

For the most accurate result, use averages from your last 10-12 posts rather than a single post. This smooths out outliers - a viral post or a poor-performing one - and gives you a reliable baseline.

Some marketers calculate engagement per reach (impressions-based) rather than per follower. The follower-based method is more widely used because follower count is publicly visible, making it easier to compare across accounts.

Tips to Improve Engagement Rate

Post when your audience is active

Check your Instagram Insights to find when your followers are online. Posting at peak times increases initial engagement, which signals the algorithm to show your content to more people.

Use strong calls-to-action

Ask questions, create polls, and encourage saves. Posts that prompt a specific action consistently outperform passive content.

Create saveable content

Infographics, tutorials, and reference guides get saved at high rates. Saves are a powerful engagement signal that boosts algorithmic reach.

Reply to every comment

Responding to comments encourages more interaction and doubles your comment count. It also builds community loyalty.

Use carousel posts

Carousels generate higher engagement than single images because they encourage swiping, which counts as interaction and increases time spent on your post.

Write longer captions

Detailed captions increase time-on-post and encourage comments. Aim for 100-200 words with a hook in the first line.

Instagram Engagement Rate by Industry (2026)

The tier table above tells you what a 50K follower account "should" do on average. But average across industries hides a 4x spread. A 2.1% engagement rate is excellent for a fashion brand at that tier and a disaster for a B2B SaaS account at that tier. Niche context matters more than people admit.

These are the engagement rate bands we see in the wild for accounts in the 10K-100K tier, based on a rolling sample of the accounts our users analyze every week.

  • Beauty and fashion: 1.5% - 3.2%. Lower than people expect because the audience is enormous and aspirational. Saves matter more than likes here.
  • Fitness and wellness: 2.0% - 4.0%. Driven by save-heavy workout content and a tight, returning audience.
  • Food and recipe: 2.5% - 4.5%. Highest save rates on the platform. Reels with on-screen recipe cards regularly clear 6%.
  • B2B SaaS: 0.6% - 1.4%. Small but high-intent. Treat clicks-to-website as a more honest signal than likes here.
  • Coaches and online education: 1.8% - 3.5%. Comments dominate over likes - quality of comment thread matters more than raw rate.
  • Travel: 1.8% - 3.0%. Visual but passive. Saves on guides outperform likes on landscapes.
  • Finance, investing, crypto: 1.2% - 2.5%. Volatile. A single market-moving post can 10x the weekly rate.
  • Real estate and local services: 0.8% - 1.8%. Lower platform-side, but DM open rate is what actually matters in this niche.

Compare yourself to the closest niche above, not to the platform average. The platform average is dragged up by food and dragged down by enterprise B2B.

Three Ways to Calculate Engagement Rate (And When to Use Each)

"Engagement rate" sounds like one number. There are actually three different formulas in common use, and they answer different questions. Picking the wrong one for your situation is the most common reason people argue about whose engagement rate is better.

Engagement rate by followers (ERF)

ERF = (likes + comments + shares + saves) / followers x 100

Use this when comparing across accounts you do not own (you cannot see anyone’s reach). This is the public-facing engagement rate everyone quotes. It is what our calculator above returns and what nearly every influencer marketing platform reports.

Engagement rate by reach (ERR)

ERR = total engagements / unique accounts reached x 100

Use this when you own the account and are diagnosing content quality. Reach-based ER ignores the dead-follower problem - it tells you what percentage of people who actually saw the post engaged with it. A reach-based ER above 8% is excellent regardless of niche.

Engagement rate by impressions (ERI)

ERI = total engagements / total impressions x 100

Use this when you are running paid promotion and one user might see the post multiple times. ERI is always lower than ERR for the same post. Brands optimizing ad creative use this to compare creative variants.

If you only have one number to report - for a partnership pitch, an investor update, a creator media kit - use ERF. It is the standard. If you are improving your own content, work in ERR; it is the honest one.

Not All Engagement Counts Equally

The formula adds likes, comments, shares, and saves together as if they are interchangeable. They are not. Instagram’s ranking model weights them very differently, and the gap has widened in 2026 after the most recent Reels-feed rebalance.

Here is the rough signal weight order from least to most valuable for algorithmic distribution:

  • Likes - cheapest signal. The bar to like a post is very low. Likes still count in the rate, but a post with 5,000 likes and 0 saves will not get pushed further by the algorithm.
  • Profile visits - not in the formula but a strong intent signal. If a post drives profile visits, the algorithm reads that as "this content made someone want to know who this is."
  • Comments - much higher value than likes. A comment takes effort. A reply to that comment from the creator counts twice (in your favor).
  • Shares to DM - the algorithm interprets this as social proof - "this is worth sending to a specific person." High weight in Reels distribution.
  • Saves - the gold standard. A save is the user telling Instagram "I want to come back to this." Carousels with high save rates are the single most effective post format for growing follower count organically.

If you want to push your engagement rate higher in a way that actually increases reach, optimize for saves and shares-to-DM first. Likes and comments will follow.

Six Common Mistakes When Calculating Engagement Rate

Most people get their own engagement rate number wrong. The math is simple - the inputs are where it goes off the rails.

  1. Using a single post. One viral Reel will give you a 12% engagement rate and a totally false sense of your baseline. Average at least the last 10 posts.
  2. Forgetting saves. Saves are only visible if you own the account or have access to Insights. People auditing other accounts often skip saves, which undercounts engagement by 20-40% in niches like food and finance.
  3. Mixing post types. Reels, carousels, and single images perform differently. Compare like-to-like or split the rate by format.
  4. Including the latest post. Posts under 48 hours old have not finished gathering engagement. Excluding the most recent post avoids a falsely low number.
  5. Comparing to the wrong tier. A 200K-follower account benchmarking against nano-influencer rates will always feel like it is underperforming. Match the benchmark to the actual follower count.
  6. Ignoring the fake-follower drag. A 1.4% engagement rate at 100K followers could be a great 2.8% rate against the real, non-bot 50%. Run our fake follower checker first if the number looks weirdly low.

How Engagement Rates Have Changed (2024 - 2026)

Instagram engagement rates have been trending down across every tier for three reasons that compounded over the last 24 months.

First, the Reels-first algorithm change. Reels reach much further than carousel or single-image posts, but they engage at a lower per-impression rate. If your feed shifted from mostly-carousels to mostly-Reels in the last year and your engagement rate dropped, that is the cause, not your content getting worse.

Second, the AI-generated content flood. The platform is saturated with low-effort AI graphics and stock-footage Reels. Users scroll faster and engage less. Even great content gets less engagement than the same content got in 2023.

Third, the multi-account audience. The same human now follows you on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and X. The attention they had for one platform now splits across four. Cross-platform engagement has not declined; per-platform engagement has.

The benchmarks table above already reflects the 2026 reset. If you are comparing your current numbers to a 2022 benchmark you saw on a Hootsuite blog post, you will feel terrible for no reason. Use current data.

How Brands Actually Use Engagement Rate in Partnership Decisions

If you are a creator hoping to land brand deals, you want to know what brands are actually looking at when they evaluate your engagement rate. Here is the honest version, based on conversations with brand-side marketing leads.

Brands rarely look at engagement rate in isolation. They cross-reference it against three other signals: fake-follower percentage (does the audience even exist?), audience geo and language match (do the right people exist?), and content-niche relevance (does the audience care about this product?). A creator with a 1.6% engagement rate and a 96%-real, 92%-US, perfectly-on-niche audience will outperform a 4.2% rate from a creator with a giveaway-loop history and a global pop-up audience every single time.

The minimum bar most brands quietly use: 1.5% engagement rate by follower for accounts above 100K, 2.5% for 10K-100K, 4% for under 10K. Below that, your media kit will not get a reply unless your audience match is exceptional.

Above those thresholds, what brands actually pay attention to is engagement quality. Are comments substantive or "🔥🔥🔥"? Are saves coming from people who later visit the brand’s website? Are shares-to-DM happening between aligned accounts? Modern brand briefs increasingly ask for engagement quality screenshots, not just the rate number.

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