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Social Media Marketing

What Is Engagement Rate?

Engagement rate is a percentage metric measuring active audience interaction with content — calculated by dividing total engagements by reach or followers and multiplying by 100.

Also known as: ER, Content Engagement Rate, Average Engagement RatePublished May 21, 2026· Updated May 21, 2026

What Is Engagement Rate? Definition and Formula

Engagement rate is a percentage metric that measures how actively an audience interacts with content, relative to the size of that audience. It is calculated by dividing the total number of engagements (likes, comments, shares, saves) by either the reach or the follower count, then multiplying by 100.

The most common formulas:

  • Engagement Rate by Reach (ERR): (Total Engagements / Reach) × 100
  • Engagement Rate by Followers (ER): (Total Engagements / Followers) × 100

ERR is generally more accurate because it measures interactions relative to how many people actually saw the content, rather than the total follower base. However, ER by followers is more commonly reported in influencer marketing because reach data is not always accessible.

Why Engagement Rate Matters More Than Follower Count

Follower count is a lagging indicator of past growth. Engagement rate is a real-time signal of current audience quality and content relevance. An account with 500,000 followers and 0.2% engagement rate has a less responsive audience than an account with 15,000 followers and 6% engagement rate.

This distinction matters significantly in brand and agency contexts. For Sagara Ruang's clients, measuring engagement rate per content piece — not just tracking total follower growth — reveals which content formats, topics, and posting styles actually resonate with the target audience.

Platform algorithms (Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, YouTube) use engagement rate as a primary signal for content amplification. High engagement rate early after posting tells the algorithm to show the content to a broader audience organically, reducing the need for paid boosting.

Benchmark Engagement Rates by Platform (2024–2025)

Industry benchmarks vary by platform and account size:

Instagram

  • Nano influencers (1k–10k): 3.69% average
  • Micro influencers (10k–100k): 2.05% average
  • Mid-tier (100k–500k): 1.60% average
  • Brand accounts (any size): 1–3% is good; above 3% is strong

LinkedIn

  • Company pages: 0.5–1% is typical; above 2% is strong
  • Individual posts: 2–5% is typical for well-optimized content

TikTok

  • Average across all account sizes: 5–9% (significantly higher due to algorithm-driven discovery)
  • Branded content on TikTok benchmarks lower: typically 3–6%

How to Calculate and Track Engagement Rate

To calculate engagement rate for a specific post:

  1. Sum all engagement actions: likes + comments + shares + saves (for Instagram); reactions + comments + reposts (for LinkedIn).
  2. Divide by reach (preferred) or follower count.
  3. Multiply by 100 to get the percentage.

Example: A post receives 580 likes, 45 comments, 30 shares, and 25 saves = 680 total engagements. Reach was 12,000. ER by reach = (680 / 12,000) × 100 = 5.67% — significantly above benchmark for a brand account.

For ongoing tracking, tools like Sprout Social, Metricool, or platform-native analytics dashboards aggregate this data across posts, enabling trend analysis over time.

Factors That Influence Engagement Rate

  • Content format — carousels and video Reels consistently outperform single static images on Instagram
  • Post timing — publishing when your audience is most active boosts early engagement velocity
  • Caption quality — questions, relatable observations, and clear CTAs drive comments
  • Visual quality — professional photography and motion design generate more saves and shares
  • Relevance — content closely aligned with audience interests outperforms broad-topic content
  • Consistency — regular posting maintains algorithmic momentum

Engagement Rate in Influencer Marketing

When evaluating influencer partnerships, engagement rate is the most important metric after audience authenticity. A micro-influencer with 20,000 followers and a 5% engagement rate will typically deliver better ROI than a macro-influencer with 500,000 followers and 0.5% engagement rate.

Sagara Ruang applies engagement rate analysis when recommending influencer tiers for clients — matching the right influencer profile to campaign objectives and budget.

To understand how engagement rate fits into a comprehensive social media strategy, explore our Social Media Management services or get in touch directly for a campaign consultation.

External Resources

For the most current platform benchmarks, Sprout Social's annual social media benchmark report is the most reliable reference. To learn more about Sagara Ruang, visit about.me/sagararuang.

Real Examples

Instagram Post Calculation

A post receives 500 likes + 60 comments + 20 saves = 580 engagements. Reach: 10,000. Engagement rate by reach = 5.8% — significantly above the 1–3% benchmark for brand accounts.

LinkedIn Company Page

An educational post gets 45 reactions, 12 comments, and 8 reposts = 65 engagements on a post with 3,200 impressions. ER = 2.03% — above average for LinkedIn company page content.

Micro-Influencer Partnership

A micro-influencer with 22,000 followers consistently delivers 4–6% engagement rate — making them more valuable per impression than a macro-influencer with 500,000 followers at 0.4%.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good engagement rate on Instagram in 2025?
For brand accounts, 1–3% is average; above 3% is strong; above 6% is excellent. Benchmarks vary by account size — smaller niche accounts naturally achieve higher rates than large brand pages.
What is the formula for engagement rate?
Engagement Rate by Reach = (Total Engagements / Reach) × 100. Engagement Rate by Followers = (Total Engagements / Followers) × 100. ERR is more accurate; ER by followers is more commonly used in influencer marketing.
Which engagement actions should I count?
On Instagram: likes + comments + shares + saves. On LinkedIn: reactions + comments + reposts + clicks. On TikTok: likes + comments + shares + saves. Saves and shares typically indicate higher audience intent than likes.
Why is engagement rate dropping even though content quality is consistent?
Common causes include: algorithm changes reducing organic reach, audience fatigue from repetitive content formats, suboptimal posting time, or increased competition for attention in your content category. A content audit and format diversification typically addresses this.

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