Metrics & Analytics

Engagement Rate

Engagement Rate combines the active signals a viewer can give YouTube: liking, commenting, saving, and (sometimes) sharing. The most common formula is (likes + comments) / views × 100. A healthy long-form video sits around 3-5% engagement. Engagement is a secondary algorithmic signal — less heavy than Watch Time or CTR, but distinctive enough to differentiate two videos with otherwise identical performance.

Last updated: May 17, 2026
Quick definition

Engagement Rate measures how often viewers interact with a YouTube video — likes plus comments divided by views — expressed as a percentage.

Why Engagement Rate matters for YouTube creators

Engagement is the metric brand sponsors look at first. An "audience that responds" is worth far more than a passive one, even at the same view count. For algorithmic reach, engagement compounds with AVD: a video that hooks viewers AND prompts a comment tells YouTube the topic is alive. Channels with consistently high engagement also benefit from comment-section discoverability, where Replies and Pinned comments funnel additional viewers from the search bar inside YouTube. The opposite is also true — a video with high views and near-zero comments can indicate bot traffic or misaligned audience targeting and may underperform in recommendation despite the view count.

How Engagement Rate works

Engagement Rate = ((Likes + Comments) / Views) × 100. Some agencies include shares and saves in the numerator. YouTube Studio doesn't expose a single "Engagement Rate" field — creators compute it from the underlying counts. Comparing engagement across videos in your own channel is the most useful application.

Engagement Rate in practice

A long-form essay channel posts a 4.5% engagement rate consistently — its viewers comment at twice the rate of comparable channels, which translates to a 30% premium on sponsor reads.

A clip-style entertainment channel sees 8M views per video but only 0.4% engagement; the audience is broad but passive, limiting brand-deal CPMs to bottom-of-market rates.

See Engagement Rate on real channels

FameLifter pulls public engagement rate data for 500K+ YouTube channels — refreshed hourly via the official YouTube Data API v3.

Frequently asked questions

What's a good engagement rate on YouTube?
3-5% is healthy on long-form videos for most niches. Above 6% is excellent. Shorts often run lower (1-3%) because their consumption is faster and viewers scroll past before tapping.
Does engagement affect search ranking?
Indirectly. Engagement signals content quality and audience fit. Engagement-heavy videos earn longer Watch Time and more comments, which boost the primary signals YouTube ranks against.
Should I ask viewers to comment?
A specific question outperforms a generic CTA every time. "Drop your country in the comments" beats "leave a comment" by 5-10x because it gives viewers something concrete and easy to type.