5 Trends to Expect From Social Media in 2026

Published on 27th January 2026

This insights post is a summary of the blog post published by Springboard Communications. View the full insight at: What to Expect From Social Media in 2026.

If there was one defining takeaway from 2025, it wasn’t that social media stopped working. It’s that standing out became dramatically harder.

Brands posted more than ever, embraced new formats, followed best practices and kept up with constant platform updates. And yet, many still saw reach dip, engagement soften and results flatten. The issue wasn’t effort or ambition — it was saturation. Feeds filled up faster than attention could keep pace.

As we head into 2026, there are insights on five shifts in social media to help steer your social media planning and efforts.

1. Search Didn’t Disappear — It Mutated

One of the earliest warning signs came from search. While Google’s market share slipped below 90% for the first time in a decade, the more important shift was seen in user behavior. With AI-powered summaries began answering questions directly, website saw a notable decline in click-through rates. In some cases, AI Overviews were eliminating the need for search users to visit websites altogether.

At the same time, discovery migrated toward social platforms and AI tools. TikTok searches surged, Instagram doubled down on in-app search and Reddit became a core source feeding AI responses. Users stopped clicking and started skimming. Visibility became less about being the destination — and more about being the source.

2. The Quiet Death of Hashtags

Another major change flew largely under the radar: hashtags stopped working.

Across platforms, their influence on reach declined sharply. Limits were introduced, and platform leaders openly confirmed they no longer drive meaningful discovery. Instead, algorithms — and AI — now read captions, visuals, on-screen text and audio to determine relevance.

In plain terms: if your content doesn’t clearly explain what it’s about, it won’t surface. Discovery now rewards clarity over clever tagging.

3. Video Became the Baseline, Not the Advantage

In 2025, video wasn’t optional — it was table stakes. Reels dominated Instagram time spent, video uploads surged on LinkedIn, and Facebook began to collapsed all video formats into Reels.

The problem? As everyone adopted the same format, it stopped being enough. Feeds filled with motion, but not necessarily with ideas that felt distinct. There was more video, but not better video.

4. More Users, Less Attention

Platform growth continued, but performance told a more sobering story. Many brands saw declining reach and engagement, even as user numbers rose. TikTok led in growth and interaction, Facebook quietly delivered stronger-than-expected results, and Instagram became increasingly competitive.

This wasn’t about platform decline. It was about overcrowding. Too much content chasing too little attention.

5. Saturation Was the Real Story of 2025

By year’s end, the pattern was clear. Creation tools exploded. AI accelerated output. Polished, platform-native content became easy to produce — and easy to ignore.

“Good enough” stopped cutting through. Consistency alone stopped working. Safe ideas blended into the feed.

What This Means for 2026

The lesson is blunt: social media didn’t change — expectations did.

In 2026, success depends less on volume and more on intent. Video is mandatory, but ideas matter more than execution. Clarity beats cleverness in a search- and AI-led environment. Emotional insight outperforms information. Distinctiveness is no longer optional.

Brands that win attention will be the ones willing to rethink how their content earns it — across feeds, search results and AI-driven discovery. For the full breakdown, data points and strategic implications, head to Springboard’s website and for the complete analysis at: What to Expect From Social Media in 2026.

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