What counts as good performance for TikTok beginners
For new TikTok creators, success is better measured by engagement rate than raw like counts. A 5–10% engagement rate - calculated as total engagements (likes, comments, shares) divided by views - is considered excellent. The platform-wide median engagement rate by follower sits at 1.73%, while strong-performing content typically achieves 6% or higher. For small accounts with fewer than 5,000 followers, reaching around 43 views per 100 followers (a 43% reach rate) represents solid performance. Hitting 1,000 likes marks a meaningful milestone, signaling that content has resonated with a growing audience and can open new opportunities for account growth.
Evidence view
Engagement rate benchmarks A 5–10% engagement rate (total engagements divided by views) is excellent for starters. The platform-wide median engagement rate by follower is 1.73%, while content showing 6% or higher is considered strong.
View and reach expectations for small accounts In 2025, the platform-wide mean sits at approximately 18,000 views. Personal accounts average around 30,115 views, business accounts around 17,523 views. Small accounts (under 5,000 followers) typically reach about 43 views per 100 followers, representing a 43% reach rate. Average engagement rates for these accounts fall between 3–4%.
Numerical milestones Reaching 1,000 likes is recognized as an exciting milestone for new creators, indicating that content has resonated with a growing audience and can unlock new account opportunities. For small accounts (0–10,000 followers), viral potential becomes realistic at around 10,000 likes when paired with high engagement rates. Viral videos maintain active engagement months after posting, unlike trending content that fades quickly.
Decision logic
SET- Calculate total engagements (likes
- + comments + shares) divided by views
- Target 5–10% for excellent performance
- Accept 3–4% as baseline for small accounts
CHECK- For accounts under 5K followers:
- 1,000 likes = meaningful milestone
- 10,000 likes = viral potential threshold when engagement rate is high
- For larger accounts, scale expectations proportionally
COMPARE- Measure views per 100 followers
- Target 43% reach rate for small accounts
- Flag performance below 30% for content review
SHIFT- Prioritize videos maintaining engagement months after posting
- Discount short-lived spikes from trending audio or hashtags
- Track engagement velocity over time, not just peak performance
RETURN- Weight engagement rate most heavily
- Use absolute likes as secondary milestone marker
- Contextualize both against account size and content age
Analysis
The evidence consistently points away from fixed like thresholds and toward proportional engagement metrics. A video with 100 views and 8 likes (8% engagement rate) outperforms one with 1,000 views and 20 likes (2% engagement rate) in algorithmic terms, even though the second has more absolute likes. This matters because TikTok's recommendation system prioritizes engagement density over raw counts when deciding which content to amplify.
For creators just starting out, the 1,000-like milestone serves as a practical psychological and algorithmic checkpoint. It signals that content has moved beyond friends-and-family reach into genuine audience resonance. The evidence shows this threshold correlates with expanded distribution opportunities, though the mechanism is emergent rather than a hard-coded platform rule. The 10,000-like mark represents a higher tier where viral potential becomes realistic for small accounts, but only when sustained engagement rates support it.
The distinction between trending and viral content is critical. Trending videos spike quickly due to popular audio or hashtags, then fade as the trend cycle moves on. Viral videos maintain active engagement months later because the content itself - not just the trend vehicle - resonates. For starters, this means a video with 500 likes that continues attracting comments and shares weeks after posting is more valuable than one with 2,000 likes that went silent after three days.
Reach rate provides a complementary lens. Small accounts achieving 43 views per 100 followers are performing at platform benchmarks, meaning roughly 43% of their follower base sees each post. When reach rate climbs above 100%, the algorithm is pushing content beyond the existing follower base into broader discovery feeds - a strong signal of content-market fit.
The evidence also reveals a structural advantage for personal accounts over business accounts in average view counts (30,115 vs. 17,523), likely reflecting algorithmic preferences for authentic, non-promotional content. Starters using business accounts should adjust expectations accordingly and focus even more intently on engagement rate rather than absolute view or like counts.
Practically, a new creator should aim for 5–10% engagement rate as the primary target, treat 1,000 likes as a meaningful early milestone, and monitor whether engagement persists beyond the first 48 hours. Content that continues attracting interactions after the initial posting window has crossed into the sustained-engagement category that the algorithm rewards with extended distribution.
Uncertainties
The evidence does not specify how engagement rate thresholds vary by content niche or format (e.g., educational vs. entertainment, short-form vs. longer videos). The 10,000-like viral threshold for small accounts lacks precision on what "high engagement rate" means in that context - whether 6%, 10%, or another figure. The relationship between reach rate and algorithmic promotion is described as correlational, but the evidence does not establish whether high reach causes further distribution or simply reflects it. Finally, the data sources span late 2024 through early 2025, so seasonal or platform-update effects may shift these benchmarks over time.