YouTube Engagement Rate Calculator
Instantly calculate your video engagement rate based on views, likes, comments, and shares. Track your channel performance and optimize your content strategy.
Video Metrics
Enter your video statistics to calculate the engagement rate
Enter the total number of views the video has received.
Include shares to social media, emails, or messaging apps.
Your Engagement Metrics
Performance rating and detailed breakdown
Enter your video metrics above, then click Calculate Engagement Rate to see your results.
YouTube Engagement Benchmarks
Understanding where your video stands helps you optimize your content strategy. Below are the standard engagement rate benchmarks for YouTube videos.
| Engagement Rate | Performance Level | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| < 1.5% | Low | Needs improvement in content or call-to-action |
| 1.5% – 3.0% | Average | Standard performance for most established channels |
| 3.0% – 7.0% | High | Strong audience connection and high content quality |
| > 7.0% | Very High | Exceptional, often viral or highly niche community content |
YouTube Analytics FAQ
Everything you need to know about calculating engagement, understanding YouTube metrics, and growing your channel.
YouTube engagement rate is calculated by adding the total number of likes, comments, and shares a video receives, dividing that sum by the total number of views, and then multiplying by 100 to get a percentage. The formula is: ((Likes + Comments + Shares) / Views) * 100.
A good engagement rate on YouTube typically falls between 1.5% and 3.0%. An engagement rate below 1.5% is considered low, while anything above 3.0% is considered high. Rates above 7.0% are exceptional and often indicate viral content.
Engagement rate is a key metric used by the YouTube algorithm to determine how well a video resonates with its audience. Higher engagement signals to YouTube that the content is valuable, which can lead to better visibility, more recommendations, and increased subscriber growth.
While some marketers calculate engagement relative to total subscribers, the standard and most accurate method for YouTube is to calculate engagement relative to total video views. This is because YouTube videos are often discovered by non-subscribers through search and recommendations.
You can improve your engagement rate by creating compelling thumbnails, asking viewers to like and comment in the video, responding to comments to build community, creating shorter and more engaging intros, and using end screens to keep viewers on your channel.
