Calculate your TikTok engagement rate by views and by followers, then compare it to 2026 benchmarks for your follower tier. Enter your video metrics and get results instantly. Includes engagement quality scoring and benchmark comparison for nano, micro, mid-tier, and macro accounts.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 8 min
TikTok engagement rate can be calculated two ways: by views and by followers. Both are valid and measure different things. This calculator gives you both because they answer different questions about your content performance.
TikTok engagement rate is the percentage of viewers or followers who actively interact with your video through likes, comments, shares, or saves.
Formula: ((Likes + Comments + Shares + Saves) / Views) x 100
This tells you how engaging your content is to the people who saw it. It’s the better metric for evaluating content quality because it accounts for TikTok’s variable reach. A video that reaches 100,000 people via the For You page and gets 8,000 engagements (8%) is performing differently than a video seen by 5,000 followers that gets 400 engagements (8%).
Formula: ((Likes + Comments + Shares + Saves) / Followers) x 100
This tells you how engaged your existing audience is. It’s the standard metric for comparing accounts against each other and against benchmarks, because follower count is publicly visible while views per video are not. The Influencer Marketing Factory’s 2026 guide recommends the follower-based method for influencer vetting.
This calculator includes an Engagement Quality Score (0-100) that weights each engagement type differently. On TikTok, shares are the strongest algorithm signal because they represent someone actively distributing your content to others. Saves indicate the content has lasting value. The weights:
A quality score above 40 means your engagement is driven by high-value actions rather than passive likes.
The virality score measures shares per 1,000 views. A score above 2.0 indicates your content has strong shareability. This metric matters because shares are the primary driver of viral distribution on TikTok in 2026 (Dark Room Agency, 2026).
A “good” TikTok engagement rate depends on your follower count, content niche, and which calculation method you use. Here are the benchmarks based on data from Social Insider, WebFX, Sprout Social, and The Influencer Marketing Factory (all published 2025-2026):
| Account Size | Follower Range | Average Engagement Rate | Good Rate | Exceptional Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nano | 1K – 10K | 10-18% | 12 – 18% | 18%+ |
| Micro | 10K – 100K | 8-12% | 8 – 12% | 12%+ |
| Mid-Tier | 100K – 1M | 4-7% | 5 – 7% | 7%+ |
| Macro | 1M – 5M | 3.76% | 3 – 5% | 5%+ |
| Mega | 5M+ | 2.88% | 2.5 – 4% | 4%+ |
The overall platform average engagement rate on TikTok in 2026 is approximately 3.7-4.9%, depending on the data source (Social Insider reports 3.70% while TTS Vibes reports benchmarks ranging to 4.9%). This is more than double Instagram’s average of about 1.1% and significantly higher than LinkedIn, Facebook, or X.
As a general framework for evaluating any TikTok account: below 2% is underperforming, 2-4% is average, 4-7% is strong, and above 7% is exceptional (SocialRails, 2026). TikTok had a 49% year-over-year increase in engagement rates (Social Insider, 2026), which means the benchmarks are rising. Rates that were “good” in 2024 may be “average” in 2026.
TikTok’s algorithm uses engagement signals to decide which videos to push to wider audiences. The 2026 algorithm prioritizes what Micky Weis calls “durable attention”: not just likes, but shares, saves, comments, and rewatch behavior. Your engagement rate is a proxy for whether the algorithm considers your content worth distributing.
For brands evaluating influencer partnerships, engagement rate is the single most important vetting metric. An account with 500,000 followers and a 1.5% engagement rate will deliver fewer results than an account with 50,000 followers and a 12% rate. The Influencer Marketing Factory’s 2026 guide recommends always comparing an influencer’s rate against the benchmark for their follower tier, not against a single universal number.
“We use TikTok engagement rate as the first filter for every influencer campaign we run. If the rate is below the tier benchmark, we pass regardless of follower count. We’ve seen brands waste $30,000 on a 1M-follower account with a 1.2% engagement rate when a $3,000 micro creator with 15% engagement would have driven 5x more clicks. The calculator doesn’t lie.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Three things to watch beyond the headline rate:
Calculate and benchmark your Instagram engagement rate with platform-specific metrics.
Find the optimal posting windows for TikTok by day, niche, and timezone.
Track your TikTok engagement rate alongside other platform metrics in a monthly report.
Run a full audit of your TikTok presence alongside all your social channels.
Use both. Engagement rate by views measures content quality (how engaging your video is to people who see it). Engagement rate by followers measures audience health (how active your overall following is). For comparing your content against itself over time, use the views-based rate. For comparing your account against competitors or benchmarks, use the follower-based rate since follower count is publicly visible.
The average TikTok engagement rate in 2026 is approximately 3.7-4.9%, depending on the data source and calculation method. Social Insider reports 3.70% (up 49% year-over-year). Accounts under 100K followers average 7.50% or higher. TikTok remains the highest-engagement social platform, roughly 2-3x higher than Instagram’s average.
This is a normal pattern on every social platform. As your follower count increases, your audience becomes more diverse and includes more passive followers. Nano accounts (1K-10K) average 10-18% engagement, while mega accounts (5M+) average around 2.88%. The key metric is whether your rate stays within the healthy benchmark for your current tier, not whether it matches your rate from when you had fewer followers.
Analyze your last 10-15 videos for a reliable average. A single viral video can dramatically skew your numbers. Using 10-15 videos smooths out outliers and gives you a more realistic picture of your baseline performance. For influencer vetting, check the creator’s last 20 videos to get a stable engagement average rather than relying on their highlighted top performers.
Shares and completion rate are the two most important signals in TikTok’s 2026 algorithm. Shares directly extend your video’s distribution to new audiences. Completion rate (percentage of viewers who watch the entire video) determines whether TikTok pushes your content beyond your existing followers. You need a 70%+ completion rate to trigger viral distribution in 2026. Saves are the third strongest signal, indicating lasting content value.
We run full social media audits with engagement analysis, content performance breakdowns, competitive benchmarking, and a data-driven strategy plan.