Instagram vs TikTok: The Algorithm Works Differently
This is the thing that confuses creators who move between platforms. TikTok distributes content primarily based on content signals - watch time, replays, shares - and follower count is almost irrelevant. Instagram still weights your existing followers significantly. It shows your content to a sample of people who already follow you, reads their response, and uses that to decide whether to push it to non-followers through the Explore page or Reels tab.
So followers actually matter on Instagram in a way they don't on TikTok. But they matter differently than you might think. Having a lot of followers isn't useful if those followers don't engage with your content. A highly engaged audience of 5,000 people will get your content distributed wider than a disengaged audience of 500,000. Instagram is measuring the quality of your follower relationship, not just the quantity.
Meta has been pretty open about this in recent years, more so than most platforms. Their internal documentation and creator guidance confirms the broad strokes: the algorithm uses a combination of interest scores (how likely is this person to engage with this type of content), relationship scores (how often do they interact with this account), and recency (how new is the content). These three factors sit on top of each other, and all three need to be decent for reach to expand.
What Instagram Actually Weighs - Ranked by Importance
Saves are the most powerful signal on Instagram. When someone saves your post, they've explicitly told the algorithm they valued it enough to return to. It's a strong intent signal - stronger than a like, stronger than a comment, significantly stronger than the view count. If you're posting content that you want to reach new people, content that's genuinely save-worthy (reference material, recipes, tutorials, things worth bookmarking) performs better than entertainment that's consumed and forgotten.
Shares come second. Sending a post to a friend or sharing it to your Story is a relationship-level endorsement that Instagram reads as a strong positive signal. The DM share is particularly valuable - it means someone thought of a specific person when they saw your content. That kind of intent is hard to fake and the algorithm knows it.
Comments matter but the quality of the comment is read differently from the quantity. Instagram apparently looks at comment length as a proxy for sentiment quality. A post with 200 comments that are all single emoji gets treated differently from a post with 40 comments that are actual sentences. Whether this is precisely true or just a rough approximation, the consistent finding from creators who track their data is that posts generating real conversations outperform posts that generate reflexive reactions.
Likes are the weakest of the engagement signals. They're still positive, but they've been diluted by how easy they are to produce. Instagram knows a like costs nothing. They've actually experimented multiple times with hiding like counts entirely. Likes help, but chasing likes as a primary goal is not a great strategy if reach is what you actually want.
Reels vs Feed Posts vs Stories - Three Separate Systems
Instagram doesn't have one algorithm. It has multiple ranking systems that operate differently based on content type and placement.
Reels get distributed to non-followers much more aggressively than feed posts. Instagram has been explicit about this since they rolled out Reels in response to TikTok. If your goal is reaching new people, Reels is the right format. The algorithm here looks heavily at watch time (did people watch the whole thing?) and shares (did people send it to someone?). Audio choice also apparently affects distribution - using trending audio gives the algorithm an additional signal about what audience the content might resonate with.
Feed posts reach your existing followers primarily. Non-follower reach through feed posts happens mainly via the Explore page, which uses your interest signals to surface content you haven't seen. Getting onto Explore requires strong engagement rate relative to your follower count in the first hours after posting. It's harder to crack than Reels for new-audience reach, but feed posts have longer shelf lives. Reels decay fast.
Stories are almost entirely a follower-relationship product. They reach your existing audience and are ranked by how often you interact with a specific account. The algorithm surfaces Stories from accounts you regularly engage with earlier in your Stories tray. New followers see your Stories rarely unless they've been engaging with your other content. Stories aren't designed for growth - they're designed to maintain existing relationships.
The Hashtag Question in 2026
Honestly, hashtags matter far less than they did three years ago. Instagram itself has been walking this back in their official guidance. The algorithm now uses AI to understand content directly - it reads captions, analyses visual content, and infers topics without needing hashtags as category labels. Hashtags help marginally with categorisation, but they won't drive the reach spikes they used to.
From what I've seen tracking accounts over the past year, the impact of hashtags on reach is mostly negligible unless you're in a very specific niche community where the hashtag actually functions as a community hub people browse. For general content, dropping hashtag count from thirty to five barely moves the needle. Spending ten minutes optimising hashtag lists instead of spending that time making the video better is a bad trade.
When You Post Still Matters on Instagram (Unlike TikTok)
TikTok's algorithm will surface old content when it's relevant. Post timing is almost irrelevant there. Instagram's algorithm is more time-sensitive, particularly for feed posts. The initial engagement window for feed content is shorter. Posts that fail to generate engagement in the first 1-3 hours generally don't recover.
Posting when your audience is active gives you a better chance of generating that early engagement. Instagram Analytics shows you exactly when your followers are online. Posting in the middle of the night when your audience is asleep means your content competes poorly in its critical early window. This is a genuine factor, not a myth - and it's one of the clearest differences between how Instagram and TikTok rank content.
Shadowbanning - Is It Real?
Sort of. Instagram has confirmed they reduce the distribution of content that violates guidelines, even content that isn't removed. They also reduce the reach of accounts that repeatedly post content that gets reported or hidden by users. This is different from fully removing content - it's just making it less likely to be surfaced.
What creators often call shadowbanning is usually one of a few things: posting content that gets hidden frequently by viewers (which is a negative signal), using hashtags that have been restricted for guideline violations, or a drop in engagement that happens for algorithmic reasons and feels inexplicable. Genuine account-level suppression exists, but it's less common than the discourse suggests.
The practical response is the same regardless: post content that your audience actually wants to engage with, don't use hashtags associated with restricted content, and don't buy fake engagement. Fake followers and fake likes actively hurt you because they raise your follower count without raising your engagement rate, which makes the algorithm think your content is poor quality relative to your audience size.
What This Means for Saving Content
Because Instagram's algorithm is time-sensitive and content disappears from feeds fast, saving posts when you see them is the practical approach for anything you want to keep. Stories vanish after 24 hours. Feed posts get buried quickly. Reels cycle through fast. MyVideoCity's Instagram downloader handles Reels, feed posts, and other Instagram video content. What the algorithm shows you today may not be findable tomorrow.
For comparison with TikTok's very different approach, see how TikTok's algorithm actually works.