From engagement data to posting frequency and follower growth analysis, these TikTok benchmarks will help you better understand TikTok's potential for your brand.


TikTok has never been easy to figure out—but lately, it’s become even harder to predict.
What used to work consistently now delivers mixed results. And if you’ve been managing a brand account for a while, you’ve probably felt it too—that subtle shift where performance becomes less about doing more, and more about doing things right.
I’ve seen this play out across multiple accounts and industries. Content is getting better. Faster. More aligned with trends. And yet, at the same time, visibility feels more uneven, growth less predictable, and results harder to replicate without a clear system behind them.
That’s exactly where Socialinsider’s TikTok benchmarks report, covering the analysis of more than 2M TikTok posts, comes to offer some guidance.
By analyzing the latest trends in engagement, views, posting frequency, follower growth and more, I wanted to understand what’s actually changing beneath the surface. Because here’s the thing. TikTok hasn’t become less effective—it’s just become more demanding. And if you don’t adjust your strategy to match that shift, it’s very easy to fall behind without even realizing it.
If there’s one thing I’ve learned after analyzing tiktok engagement benchmarks year after year, it’s this: engagement on TikTok doesn’t stand still. It shifts quietly—and if you’re not paying attention, you miss the moment when “good” becomes “average.”
That’s exactly what’s happening here.
At a platform level, Tiktok's engagement rate by views has increased from 3.85% in 2024 to 4.20% in 2025, scoring a 9% YoY increase. Now, that might look like a small jump, but in reality, it signals a bigger behavioral shift. Audiences are engaging more—but they’re also expecting more. The content that wins today is sharper, faster, and way more intentional.

When I dug deeper into the numbers by page size, a familiar pattern showed up— that smaller accounts (1K–5K followers) are leading the pack, climbing from 4.20% to 4.40%. Personally, I’ve seen this play out over and over—and that’s because smaller accounts are closer to their audience, quicker to jump on trends, and less restricted by internal approvals. But once you move beyond that tier, engagement starts to plateau.
And here’s a valuable lesson for brands: engagement isn’t something you “carry” with you as your follower count grows—it’s something you have to constantly re-earn. As you scale, content has to work harder to feel just as relevant, just as native, just as worth interacting with. That’s why bigger audiences don’t automatically translate into higher engagement—relevance does.

After seeing how TikTok’s engagement benchmarks evolved, one thing became clear: while engagement tends to plateau as accounts grow, raw interactions tell a slightly different story.
Likes, in particular, show steady and predictable growth as accounts scale, with that consistency clearly showing up in Socialinsider’s data.
As for insights that drew my attention, I would also mention that every audience segment saw an increase in likes from 2024 to 2025, the overall YoY growth located at an average of 9%. From smaller accounts to larger brands, average likes per post are consistently moving upward, reinforcing the idea that as visibility expands, so does this type of interaction.
However, there’s an important nuance here.
While likes are a strong signal of reach, they don’t always reflect how deeply content resonates. They’re easy, immediate, almost instinctive—which makes them valuable for measuring exposure, but less reliable when it comes to understanding true engagement depth.

If likes are easy to earn, comments are where things get real. This is the metric that shows whether your content actually triggered a reaction—not just a quick tap.
According to Socialinsider’s data, the average number of comments on a TikTok video increased across every single page size from 2024 to 2025. No exceptions. And get this, while across the board the increase reflects a change of about 3%, the largest accounts (with more than 100K followers) even hit the 100 comments mark, scoring an 11% climb.
These aren’t just incremental gains—they suggest that brands are getting better at creating content that invites participation, not just passive interaction.
But unlike likes, comments don’t scale as easily. Truthfully, the growth is more uneven and far more dependent on how content is structured. That’s because comments require intent. More thought. More emotional investment.
In other words, comments start to pick up when content truly feels relevant.

Shares have quietly become one of the most important metrics on TikTok—and not just for reach, but for trust.
When someone shares your content, they’re not just interacting with it—they’re endorsing it. They’re saying, “this is worth someone else’s attention.” And that shift matters. Because in a crowded feed, trust is what drives amplification.
Looking at the Socialinsider data, it quickly becomes evident that shares are climbing across the board from 2024 to 2025 (up to 13%)—but not at the same pace. The growth starts off steady, almost easy to overlook… and then it picks up speed. The larger the account, the sharper the increase, turning what looks like a trend into something much more momentum-driven.
This becomes especially clear in the top tiers.
Accounts between 50K–100K followers jump from 135 to 200 shares per post. And for brands with 100K–1M followers, the increase is even more striking—from 330 to 477 average shares per tiktok video.
Now, when talking about shares, it’s important to understand what actually drives them. Sharing only happens when content delivers transferable value—something worth passing on. And once that kind of value is in place, distribution starts to feed itself. What begins as engagement quickly turns into amplification.

After seeing steady growth across engagement, likes, comments, and shares, you’d expect the same pattern when looking at the average views per TikTok video, right?. However, that’s not what the Socialinsider data shows.
Looking at the latest TikTok views benchmarks, a clear divide starts to emerge: while smaller accounts are losing ground (scoring an average of 23% decrease in their average TikTok views gained), on the other end of the spectrum, the trend flips.
So what explains this split?
From what I’ve seen, this comes down to how competition and content maturity are evolving on the platform.
There’s simply more content than ever. And as volume increases, breaking through at the lower tiers becomes harder. Smaller accounts are competing in a much more crowded space, often without the consistency, testing cycles, or content systems that larger brands have already built.
At the same time, bigger accounts benefit from momentum.
Not just in terms of followers, but in terms of proven formats, audience signals, and repeated performance patterns. The algorithm has more data to work with—and that increases the chances of content being distributed further, faster.
So while TikTok still rewards relevance, visibility is becoming more uneven.
And that’s the shift: it’s no longer just about creating good content—it’s about competing in a more saturated, performance-driven environment where scale amplifies your chances of being seen.

As visibility becomes harder to secure and competition continues to rise, brands are starting to adjust to a new landscape, which is visible in how content strategies are evolving.
Posting is no longer just about consistency or staying active. It’s about increasing your chances of being seen. And that shift is reflected clearly in the data, with posting frequency increasing by 40% on average across every single page size from 2024 to 2025.
But here’s something you should know: they’re not just posting more randomly—they’re building volume with intent. Because here’s the reality: on TikTok, consistency isn’t enough anymore. Frequency is becoming a competitive advantage.
But there’s a catch.
More content doesn’t automatically mean better performance. If anything, it raises the bar. The more you post, the more disciplined you need to be with quality, structure, and iteration.
Which is why the brands increasing their posting frequency—and actually seeing results—are the ones treating content like a system, not a one-off effort.

Follower growth is starting to show a different kind of shift—one that goes beyond TikTok. Across most major social platforms, growth rates have been slowing down, and TikTok is no exception.
Socialinsider’s TikTok follower growth benchmarks show that every segment saw a decline from 2024 to 2025. On average, there’s a 33% decrease tendency, but the drop isn’t evenly distributed - smaller accounts are feeling it the most.
While small to mid-sized accounts scored a growth rate decrease of around 50%, the data indicated that as accounts grow, the decline becomes less aggressive. And there’s a reason for that.
As platforms mature, growth doesn’t come as easily. People are still engaging with content—but following has become a more deliberate action.
Which changes the game. Because growth on TikTok is no longer just about getting attention—it’s about converting visibility into long-term audience.

The dataset used to uncover these TikTok benchmarks consisted of 2M TikTok videos coming from 214.507 TikTok profiles that had an active presence on TikTok between January 2024 - December 2025.
TikTok engagement rate by views: it is calculated by adding the total interactions of Tiktok posts (including likes, comments, shares and saves) divided by the number of views gained within the selected timeframe and multiplied by 100.
Average likes per post represents the number of likes a post receives on average.
Average comments per post represents the number of comments a post receives, on average.
Average shares per post stands for the average number of shares a post receives, on average.
The average follower growth rate is calculated as the number of followers you gained divided by the number of followers you started with and multiplied by 100.
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