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Engagement Rate Calculator for growth teams

Enter your engagements and audience metrics to calculate engagement rate by followers, reach, and impressions. Compare post quality faster without spreadsheet cleanup.

Likes, comments, shares, saves, clicks (use your consistent definition)
Use for account-level engagement benchmarking
Unique users who saw the content
Total content views including repeats
Used to calculate average engagements per post

Your Results

Duct tracks content engagement shifts automatically every week.

See what changed, why it moved, and where to act next.

See it in action →

How the calculator works

The calculator computes engagement rate using standard formulas:

You can use one denominator or all three. The output helps you compare both headline quality (reach-based) and feed efficiency (impressions-based) while keeping follower context in view.

Why engagement rate matters

Raw engagement totals can be misleading. A post with 500 engagements may look strong, but if it reached 80,000 people it underperformed. Engagement rate normalizes quality relative to distribution and lets teams compare content across weeks and campaigns.

For organic growth teams, engagement rate is an early signal for messaging resonance. If engagement rate declines before traffic declines, you can fix creative and positioning before funnel conversion is affected.

Limitations

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How do you calculate engagement rate?

Engagement rate = Total Engagements ÷ audience denominator × 100. Common denominators are followers, reach, and impressions. The best one depends on what you are trying to compare.

What is a good engagement rate?

Benchmarks vary by platform and audience size, but many teams use this follower-based heuristic: below 1% low, 1-3% average, 3-6% healthy, and above 6% strong.

Should I use reach or impressions?

Use reach when you care about unique audience quality. Use impressions when your content is shown repeatedly and you want efficiency relative to total exposures.

Can I compare engagement rate across channels?

Compare trends first, not absolute values. Platform feed design, audience behavior, and content format can produce different baseline ranges.

What should count as engagement?

Typically likes, comments, shares, saves, clicks, and replies. The critical part is using the same definition every week so trend analysis stays consistent.