
17 July 2026

Written By Katja Orel
Lead Editor, UGC Marketing

Fact Checked By Sebastian Novin
Co-Founder & COO, Influee
TikTok vs Instagram isn't really a versus question for brands. It's which platform does what, and whether you're using both correctly.
TikTok reaches new audiences faster, at lower ad cost, and with more views per post. Instagram gives you the placements and retargeting to convert the people who already know you. Most DTC brands running UGC and influencer campaigns need both, with a different creative strategy for each.
Cross-posting the same video doesn't work. Here's how to brief for each platform, where your budget goes further, and how to build a campaign that uses TikTok and Instagram for what they're actually good at.

TikTok is for discovery and acquisition. Instagram is for retargeting, community, and converting the audience you've already built. For most DTC brands, the right answer is both, but treated as two separate channels with two separate briefs, not one campaign cross-posted.
The split comes down to how each algorithm distributes content.
TikTok's For You Page surfaces content to new audiences regardless of follower count. A brand with 200 followers can still reach hundreds of thousands of strangers if the creative earns it. That makes TikTok the better cold-audience channel, because you're reaching people who've never heard of you.
Instagram's Reels algorithm also pushes to non-followers, but the platform's real strength is the audience infrastructure around it. Stories, DMs, the main feed, saved posts, and lookalike targeting all work to warm and convert people who already know you or match your best customers.
The budget logic follows from that. TikTok is the cheaper place to learn whether a creative concept works, because cost per click is lower and the For You Page pushes it to cold audiences fast. Once a hook or angle proves out, recut it natively and run it on Instagram, where the placements and retargeting turn a warm audience into buyers. You're not testing on a different buyer: the 25 to 34 audience you care about is large on both platforms, TikTok just reaches more of them cold.

TikTok's users are younger and Instagram's are older, and both are big enough that the age gap rarely decides anything on its own.
Instagram has more than 3 billion monthly active users, with its largest single demographic in the 25 to 34 bracket. TikTok has close to 2 billion monthly active users, with its largest demographic in the 18 to 24 bracket.
The number that matters more for brands: 49% of US consumers now use TikTok as a search tool. Product discovery is shifting there, especially for Gen Z. When someone wants a skincare recommendation, they're increasingly typing it into TikTok, not Google.
Which platform you pick should follow your broader influencer marketing strategy, not drive it. TikTok is where a 22-year-old who's never heard of you first finds you in the feed. Instagram is where a 30-year-old who already follows you and three of your competitors gets re-engaged. Most brands need both jobs done, which is why the split is discovery versus re-engagement, not young versus old.

TikTok leads on engagement, and the reach gap doesn't run the way most brands assume.
TikTok's engagement rate is 2.60% against Instagram's 0.48%, more than five times higher. On raw engagement, TikTok wins clearly.
Reach doesn't flip it back. Instagram Reels get 29% fewer views than TikTok videos, across a study of 24.3 million posts. TikTok leads on views per post too, so the familiar advice to post on Instagram for reach and TikTok for interaction doesn't survive the data.
That doesn't make Instagram the weaker platform. It makes its job a different one. Instagram earns its budget on retargeting, placement variety, and an audience that already knows you, not on pushing you to strangers.
Two more patterns change how you'd use each platform:
The nuance most brands miss: TikTok is where you get found, and Instagram is where you get chosen. Distribution and conversion are different jobs, and you want each done on the platform built for it.
A cut that performs on TikTok usually underperforms on Instagram if you post it unchanged, because the two feeds reward different things. The formats look similar, but the creative rules are different enough that one brief rarely serves both.
Entertainment-first, trend-aware. Even product content has to feel native to the For You Page. A video that opens like an ad gets scrolled past. Brief creators to lead with a story, a reaction, or a hook that earns the watch before the product shows up.
Hook in the first 2 seconds. TikTok's cutoff is harder than Instagram's. If the first frame doesn't stop the scroll, the algorithm won't keep serving it.
Sound-on is assumed. Music, trending audio, and voiceover are part of the creative, not optional extras. Silence reads as broken.
Lo-fi beats polished. Over-produced content reads as an ad and gets ignored. A phone, decent lighting, and a real voice outperform a studio shoot here.
Duet and Stitch. Brief creators to enable these so other users can build on the content, which extends reach for free.
Spark Ads. You can run a creator's video as a paid ad directly from their account, keeping the native look while adding paid reach. Spark Ads are widely reported to drive around 142% higher engagement and 69% higher conversion than standard in-feed ads. Briefing for Spark from the start is what separates TikTok UGC that scales from content that stalls after one post.
Slightly more brand-controlled. Instagram audiences tolerate polished creative better, so you have a little more room for structure and brand cues.
Sound-off is the assumption. Instagram autoplays muted in the feed, so captions aren't optional. Bake them in.
Multiple placements from one asset. Feed, Stories, Reels, and carousel all live on Instagram, so a single piece of content gets repurposed across placements instead of living and dying in one feed.
Partnership Ads. Same mechanism as Spark Ads: run creator content as paid from the creator's handle, preserving the authentic look while you add spend behind it.
Stories CTAs. Link stickers give you a direct bottom-funnel action that TikTok's organic surface doesn't match as cleanly.

The briefing implication: don't hand one brief to a creator and ask for a version that works everywhere. The same discipline that makes UGC ads convert applies to organic too, because execution has to match the surface. Brief for TikTok first, with entertainment, trend-native framing and sound-on. Then ask for an Instagram-native cut that's more structured, with captions baked in and sound-off safe.

Influencer marketing splits along the same line as UGC: TikTok for discovery and reach, Instagram for community and trust. The difference shows up in both the rates and the results.
TikTok influencer rates typically run 10 to 25% below Instagram at equivalent follower sizes, so the same budget buys more content. For nano influencers under 10,000 followers, the engagement gap is wide: TikTok engagement reaches as high as 11.9% against roughly 2.19% on Instagram. Smaller influencers outperform larger tiers on TikTok, which is why nano and micro partnerships work so well there. Platform rates move, so treat these figures as indicative and confirm the current numbers before you commit.

Instagram influencer pricing runs higher, generally in the range of $100 to $250 per post at 10,000 to 25,000 followers, with higher tiers a lot more expensive. What you pay for on Instagram is less about reach and more about trust: around 40% of users prefer Instagram for community against 22% for TikTok.
The practical split:
Spark Ads and Partnership Ads do the same job on both sides: run influencer content as paid from the influencer's account, so you keep the authenticity and add distribution. Both require content rights upfront, so settle a fair UGC price and the usage terms at the contract stage.
An influencer marketing platform keeps sourcing, contracts, rights, and payments in one workflow instead of a spreadsheet, which matters once you're past a couple of influencers. For creator-made content, a UGC platform does the same job. If you're starting with gifted partnerships, influencer gifting terms are worth putting in writing before any product ships. The platform you scale on should follow the goal: discovery on TikTok, retention on Instagram.

UGC videos starting at A$55

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Cheaper isn't the same as more efficient. Instagram has the lower CPM, but TikTok's higher click-through rate often makes its real cost per click competitive.
Here's the raw comparison.
TikTok | ||
|---|---|---|
Avg CPC | $0.17–$1.00 | $0.40–$2.00 |
Avg CPM | $4.20–$9.00 | $2.00–$6.00 |
Avg CTR | 0.84–3.18% | 0.40–0.74% |
The nuance behind the numbers matters more than any single figure.
The budget recommendation writes itself. Use TikTok to test new creative angles at a lower cost per click, then run the winners on Instagram, where the extra placements and retargeting do the converting. As you scale Meta spend, watch for ad fatigue Facebook patterns as frequency climbs. Before you write off a creative as a loser, check your funnel against the average conversion rate Facebook ads benchmarks. A weak converter on Instagram can still be a strong discovery play on TikTok.

There's no universal answer, but there is a clear lean for most brand types. Match the platform to what your brand needs to do first.
Primary platform | Why | |
|---|---|---|
DTC ecommerce (fashion, beauty, food) | Both | TikTok for discovery, Instagram for retargeting |
Health and wellness | Trust-building content, older demographic skew | |
SaaS / app | TikTok first | Product demo and walkthrough content performs well for discovery |
B2B | Older demographic, more professional context | |
New brand, limited budget | TikTok first | Lower CPC, higher organic reach potential, easier to test |
Established brand with existing audience | Instagram first | Retargeting and lookalike audiences are more efficient |
One limitation worth naming: "both" is the right answer for most DTC brands, but only if you can actually produce for both. If you can brief, source, and manage creative for one platform properly, do that well before you split attention. A strong single-platform presence beats a thin two-platform one, and a new brand on a limited budget is usually better off proving creative on TikTok first than spreading a small budget across two channels.

UGC videos starting at A$55

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The most common mistake is uploading the same video to both platforms. It doesn't just underperform, it actively costs you reach.
Cross-posting with watermarks is penalized by both platforms. A TikTok watermark suppresses Instagram Reels reach, and an Instagram watermark looks out of place on TikTok. Even without watermarks, the creative cues that work on one surface fall flat on the other.
The right approach is one campaign objective with platform-native execution.

If budget is tight, brief for TikTok first, then ask the creator for a second cut with captions added and audio made optional. That's your Instagram version, and it takes about 20 minutes in post.
A clear brief pays off twice here. Strong UGC script examples with best practices give creators the structure to nail both cuts. Knowing how to hire UGC creators who can deliver platform-native content from the start saves you the revision cycle. Brief each platform for what it does best, and you stop leaving reach on the table.

UGC videos starting at A$55

4.000+ Vetted Creators in Australia
Most brands should be on both TikTok and Instagram, because they do different jobs. TikTok drives discovery and reaches cold audiences at lower ad cost, while Instagram is stronger for retargeting, community, and reaching 25 to 34 buyers. If you can only run one well, start with the platform that matches your primary goal.
TikTok is better for UGC ads aimed at discovery, since lo-fi, entertainment-first content thrives on the For You Page and Spark Ads add paid reach without losing the native feel. Instagram is better for UGC ads that retarget a warmer audience, thanks to multiple placements and Stories CTAs. The creative has to be briefed differently for each.
You shouldn't run the exact same UGC creative on both platforms. TikTok assumes sound-on and lo-fi, while Instagram assumes sound-off with baked-in captions, so a single cut underperforms on one of them. Brief for TikTok first, then produce an Instagram-native version with captions and optional audio.
Spark Ads and Partnership Ads are the same idea on two platforms: both let a brand run a creator's organic post as a paid ad from the creator's own account. Spark Ads is TikTok's version and Partnership Ads is Instagram's. Both need content rights agreed with the creator upfront.
TikTok is usually better for small DTC brands with a limited budget. Cost per click is lower, organic reach potential is higher, and the For You Page can distribute strong creative without heavy spend. With little to spend, lean on TikTok organic and one or two Spark Ads before you put anything into Instagram.
TikTok often delivers better ROI for discovery-led influencer marketing, because rates run lower and nano-influencer engagement is far higher. Instagram delivers better ROI when the goal is community, trust, or converting an existing audience. The better-ROI platform depends on whether you're acquiring or nurturing.
TL;DR
The short answer — TikTok and Instagram do different jobs
Who's actually on each platform
Engagement and reach — what the numbers mean for brands
UGC on TikTok vs Instagram — what works differently
Influencer marketing on TikTok vs Instagram
TikTok vs Instagram ad costs
Which platform for which brand type
Don't cross-post — brief for each platform separately
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