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YouTube engagement varies by length, adding complexity to video marketing plans

The news: There’s a sweet spot for advertisers to hit in video marketing as user interest fluctuates based on length. Engagement on YouTube doesn’t rise or fall evenly with runtime—it peaks in the middle, per our industry KPI data provided by Pixability.

  • Videos under 30 seconds receive a 1% organic engagement rate.
  • Content between 1 and 3 minutes leads by a wide margin, with a 2.5% engagement rate.
  • Videos 3 to 5 minutes perform the worst at just 0.8%.
  • Engagement rate picks back up as length increases, reaching about 1.7% for videos 10 minutes long or more.

What it means: Both ultra-short and mid-length content underperforms, while longer short-form stands out. The weakest results come from videos that sit in between quick hits and profound storytelling, presenting a potential “no man’s land” of content that’s too long for casual viewing but not deep enough to justify the time.

Engagement reflects how well content lives up to what audiences expect to get out of the time they spend with it. This undercuts the assumption that trimming down videos is the best path to performance on YouTube.

Why it matters: Short-form videos add reach but don’t always drive engagement, while longer formats can require higher production effort and costs without guaranteed payoff. Audience intent could play a bigger role than sheer length—viewers may be willing to spend more time with content when they think there’s a clear payoff.

For media planners, this creates a complex optimization challenge.

  • Leaning on short-form alone may leave engagement opportunities on the table.
  • However, mid-length content that lacks narrative depth could waste production resources.

Recommendations for brands: Optimize for value density, not just brevity, by aligning video length with campaign goals, audience expectations, and platform behavior.

  • If the goal is brand awareness, ultra-short clips can still capture quick impressions.
  • If the objective is engagement—such as comments and shares or conversions through detailed product information—then slightly longer storytelling may deliver stronger returns.

Go deeper: Want more YouTube benchmarking data? PRO+ subscribers have access to Industry KPIs, our collection of more than 400 benchmarks in marketing and retail and ecommerce across a range of industries and countries. Click here for more information.

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