TikTok - Still the Best Platform for Growing From Zero
If you have no audience and you want to build one fast, TikTok is still the answer in 2026. The algorithm distributes content to non-followers more aggressively than any other platform. A good video from a brand new account can reach millions of people. That almost never happens on YouTube Shorts from zero, and while Reels can break out on Instagram, the follower-relationship weighting means it's harder to reach people who haven't chosen to follow you yet.
TikTok's audience is younger than YouTube's general audience, and that's worth factoring in. If your content has mass appeal, TikTok's demographics aren't a problem. If you're creating content for, say, 40-year-old financial planners or people who collect vintage cameras, TikTok's demographic skew is real and it affects your results. The platform is growing older as it matures but it's still meaningfully younger than YouTube or Facebook.
The political situation around TikTok in the US is still unresolved as of mid-2026. There have been ongoing discussions about ownership requirements, operational restrictions, and platform bans that have created real uncertainty. I wouldn't build a business that depends entirely on TikTok being accessible in your target market, given that uncertainty. Diversify. But as a growth engine for building an audience that you then bring elsewhere, TikTok remains the most effective short-form platform.
YouTube Shorts - The Revenue Picture Has Improved
YouTube Shorts didn't monetise well for the first couple of years. The revenue share from Shorts was significantly lower per view than long-form content, and creators who shifted their focus to Shorts early took a real income hit. YouTube has adjusted this. Shorts now participate in the YouTube Partner Programme at rates that are meaningfully better than they were in 2022-2023, and the ad market for short-form video has matured.
YouTube Shorts has a structural advantage that the other platforms don't: it sits inside the YouTube ecosystem. A viewer who finds your Shorts content can immediately see your long-form videos, your playlists, your entire channel history. The conversion from Shorts viewer to channel subscriber is easier because everything lives in one place. For creators who produce both short and long-form content, YouTube offers an integrated funnel that TikTok and Instagram don't replicate.
Search is another Shorts advantage. YouTube is the second largest search engine in the world. Shorts content appears in YouTube search results in a way that TikTok and Instagram content simply doesn't. If your content has search relevance - how-to videos, tutorials, educational content - Shorts can capture search traffic that feeds into your overall channel growth. This is a genuinely unique advantage.
The Shorts algorithm itself is less aggressive at distributing to new audiences than TikTok's. Growing from zero is slower. But the platform's size means that once you build momentum, the potential audience is enormous.
Instagram Reels - The Platform for Existing Audiences
Instagram Reels is weakest for cold audience growth and strongest for staying relevant to an audience you've already built. If you have 50,000 engaged Instagram followers, Reels gives you a consistent way to appear in their feeds, which matters for maintaining relationships and driving conversions (to your link, your product, your newsletter). If you're starting from zero, Instagram is the hardest of the three for building an audience through short-form video alone.
Reels also has the most polished creator ecosystem right now. Brand partnerships, affiliate programmes, Instagram Shopping integrations - the monetisation infrastructure for creators who sell products or services is more developed on Instagram than on TikTok or Shorts. If your business involves e-commerce or brand deals in consumer categories, Instagram's ecosystem is valuable.
The compression issue is real. Instagram compresses video more aggressively than YouTube, and more aggressively than TikTok for many upload types. High-motion content, fine detail, fast cuts - all suffer more on Instagram than on the other platforms. If production quality is important to your content identity, this is a meaningful consideration. Uploading at maximum quality settings and avoiding re-uploads helps, but you can't fully escape it.
Cross-Posting: Should You Just Post the Same Video Everywhere?
Yes, mostly. The main thing to watch: remove TikTok watermarks before posting to other platforms. Instagram and YouTube both reduce distribution of content that has visible TikTok branding. MyVideoCity's TikTok downloader downloads without watermarks, which makes cross-posting cleaner.
Some creators adapt content for each platform - different caption lengths, different aspect ratios, different hook styles. That's better practice if you have the time. But if you have to choose between posting to all three with the same video or only posting to one, cross-posting wins. Three platforms is three chances to reach someone. The returns aren't perfectly additive but they're meaningfully higher than single-platform.
My Actual Recommendation
If you're starting from scratch: TikTok first. Build audience there, cross-post to Shorts and Reels. As your Shorts audience grows, put more effort into longer YouTube content to capture the monetisation advantage. Instagram is worth maintaining but prioritise it less for growth unless you're in a category where Instagram's commerce tools are directly valuable to you.
If you already have an established audience somewhere: stay on your existing platform first. The grass-is-greener effect in creator strategy is real. Rebuilding an audience from scratch on a new platform is harder than making better content for the audience you already have. Expand to other platforms gradually, starting with the one that requires the least adaptation of your existing format.
For understanding how each platform's algorithm handles your content once you post it, see our separate guides on TikTok's algorithm and Instagram's algorithm.