Click Analytic dashboard view: engagement benchmarks, creator tier bars, and verification signals.
Last updated: May 2026
Quick answer: Influencer engagement rate is the percentage of a creator’s audience or viewers who interact with their content. Calculate it as total engagements divided by followers, reach, impressions, or views, then multiply by 100. A good rate depends on platform, creator size, format, niche, and audience quality. In Click Analytic’s December 2025 Instagram benchmark sample, median engagement among creators with 10K+ followers ranged from 0.73% to 1.20% by size tier.
What is influencer engagement rate?
Influencer engagement rate is the percentage of an influencer’s audience that interacts with their content. It usually includes likes, comments, shares, saves, or views, depending on the platform. Brands use it to estimate how actively a creator’s audience responds, not just how many followers the creator has.
In simple terms, engagement rate answers one question: does this audience react?
Definition: Influencer engagement rate measures interactions divided by an audience or exposure base. The base is usually followers, reach, impressions, or views.
Follower count tells you potential reach. Engagement rate tells you whether people are still paying attention. If two creators both fit your brief, the one with fewer followers but stronger, cleaner engagement may be the better shortlist pick.
Do not treat engagement rate as a yes-or-no hiring score. Use it to decide who deserves a closer look, then check audience quality, comment substance, recent sponsored posts, price, and brand fit.
Paul Boulet · Founder, Click Analytic
At Click Analytic, we look at engagement beside real audience quality, content history, brand deal history, and format performance. That is how teams avoid paying for vanity metrics and start choosing creators who can actually move attention, trust, and demand.
About the author: Paul Boulet is the Founder of Click Analytic, an influencer marketing platform used by brand and agency teams to discover, vet, and benchmark creators. Click Analytic tracks creator profiles, audience quality signals, engagement patterns, and campaign fit across major social platforms.
How to calculate influencer engagement rate
To calculate influencer engagement rate, divide total engagements by followers, reach, impressions, or views, then multiply by 100. The most common influencer engagement rate formula is engagements divided by followers. For campaign reporting, reach-based or impression-based formulas are usually more accurate.
Choose the formula based on the job. Shortlisting creators before outreach? Use follower-based engagement so you can compare profiles quickly. Reporting on a live campaign? Use reach, impressions, or views because those show how many people actually saw the content.
Use case
Influencer engagement rate formula
When to use it
Creator screening
(Likes + comments + shares + saves) ÷ followers × 100
Shortlisting influencers before outreach
Instagram campaign reporting
(Likes + comments + saves + shares) ÷ reach × 100
Comparing delivered campaign posts
TikTok review
(Likes + comments + shares) ÷ views × 100
Judging video response against actual exposure
YouTube review
(Likes + comments) ÷ views × 100
Evaluating long-form video interaction
You may also see these formulas called engagement rate by followers, engagement rate by reach, engagement rate by impressions, or engagement rate by views. Reach-based engagement is often shortened to ERR. The best version depends on whether you are screening creators before outreach or reporting on content after it runs.
Example: an Instagram creator has 50,000 followers. Their last 12 posts average 400 likes, 25 comments, 20 saves, and 10 shares. Total average engagements are 455.
455 ÷ 50,000 × 100 = 0.91% engagement rate.
To calculate engagement rate for one post, use the same formula with that post’s engagements instead of an average. If one post gets 600 engagements and the creator has 50,000 followers, the post-level engagement rate is 600 ÷ 50,000 × 100 = 1.20%.
Influencer engagement rate benchmarks for 2026
Influencer engagement rate benchmarks should be read by platform and creator size, not as one universal number. On Instagram, our 2025 dataset shows a counterintuitive pattern: median engagement rises with creator size among accounts above 10K followers, which differs from the common assumption that smaller creators always engage better.
Data note: Click Analytic’s database includes 400M+ creator profiles. For the Creator Economy Report, we analyzed a filtered December 2025 snapshot of 23.6M profiles across 25 countries, limited to creators with 10K+ followers. The Instagram benchmarks below come from that report’s Instagram cohort, so use them as peer benchmarks for Instagram creators, not as universal influencer averages.
In our Creator Economy Report, the December 2025 Instagram benchmark snapshot showed these median engagement rates by creator size:
Instagram creator size
Median engagement rate
How to interpret it
10K to 50K followers
Use as a practical micro tier reference point.
50K to 100K followers
Do not reject creators only because they sit below 1%.
100K to 500K followers
Strong enough to warrant closer review if audience quality is sound.
500K to 1M followers
Look closely at recent posts and paid partnership history.
1M+ followers
High scale does not automatically mean weak engagement on Instagram.
Instagram median engagement rate by creator tier, December 2025 Horizontal bar chart showing Instagram median engagement rate by creator tier: 10K-50K 0.80%, 50K-100K 0.73%, 100K-500K 1.02%, 500K-1M 1.10%, 1M+ 1.20%. Source: Click Analytic Creator Economy Report, December 2025 snapshot. Instagram median engagement rate by creator tier Click Analytic Creator Economy Report. December 2025 snapshot. Creators with 10K+ followers across 25 countries. 0.0% 0.5% 1.0% 1.5% 10K to 50K 0.80% 50K to 100K 0.73% 100K to 500K 1.02% 500K to 1M 1.10% 1M+ 1.20%
We use median engagement rate because averages can be distorted by viral posts, unusually large creators, and outlier accounts. Median benchmarks give marketers a cleaner peer reference when comparing creators in the same tier.
This matters for teams searching for an average influencer engagement rate. A single average hides too much. Benchmarks should be split by platform, tier, niche, format, and time period.
It also changes how brands evaluate the micro influencer engagement rate. Smaller creators can be efficient, trusted, and affordable. But they are not automatically more engaging in every dataset or campaign context. If you are building a micro creator program, use our breakdown of what counts as a micro influencer before you set targets.
For nano influencer engagement rate analysis, be careful with small denominators. Nano creators can show high rates because the audience base is small, and many sit below the 10K-follower cutoff used in our benchmark sample. That does not make them weak. It means you should judge them with comment quality, local relevance, audience fit, and recent post consistency instead of comparing them directly with 10K+ creator benchmarks.
What is a good influencer engagement rate?
A good influencer engagement rate is one that beats the relevant benchmark for that creator’s platform, size, niche, and content format, while coming from real people. In 2026, good does not mean one fixed percentage. It means the creator performs above peer context and passes authenticity checks.
Use this decision framework instead of a universal cutoff:
- Compare by platform. Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube reward different behaviors.
- Compare by tier. A 50K creator and a 1M creator should not be judged with the same expectation.
- Compare by format. Reels, carousels, Stories, Shorts, and long-form videos produce different actions.
- Check recency. Use recent posts, not one viral post from months ago.
- Verify authenticity. High engagement from fake or low-quality audiences has little value.
For paid campaigns, good engagement must also make financial sense. A creator with a decent engagement rate may still be overpriced if their fee is high relative to expected reach, content rights, audience fit, and conversion value. If you are setting budgets, compare engagement signals with current rate expectations in our influencer price list.
The practical rule: do not ask, “Is this engagement rate high?” Ask, “Is this engagement rate strong for this audience, format, niche, and price?”
