The U.S. creator economy is moving toward a period of massive growth in 2026, driven by recent developments in artificial intelligence, community engagement, and other factors. Content creators are now at the center of today’s media landscape, with a 10% CAGR in their global population and over $10.5M in projected brand spend for their work. Moreover, influencer marketing has become one of the most effective methods for leading brands to reach, engage, and convert consumers. 56% of Gen Z and 43% of Millennial users report that they now consider creator content more relevant than TV or film, and over 41% of Gen Zers in particular use social platforms as their primary search engine. The creator economy and the greater marketing industry are actively seeing a full-scale shift toward intent-based discovery powered by authentic creators, and now is the most crucial time to strategize how brands collaborate with these social-first voices.
This February, The Influencer Marketing Factory (TIMF) published its Creator Economy 2026 Report, which combines large-scale third-party platform data, contributed by HypeAuditor, with original survey research to illustrate the current state of the creator economy for marketers. With exclusive insights from over 5M creator accounts and 1,000 U.S.-based creator survey respondents, the 2026 Creator Economy Report is your new go-to source for key trends and marketing strategies for both brands and influencers.
1. Big Picture 2026 Creator Economy Trends
2026 will be the year of in-person creator activations and matured creator entrepreneurship. IRL (In Real Life) creator events are gaining momentum as powerful community-building experiences that also drive direct sales for both brands and creator-led businesses. These creator businesses are now fueled by venture capital more than ever before, from VC firms like Slow Ventures or dedicated creator funds. Besides typical digital products or consumer-packaged goods, creator media companies are making up the next wave of influencer entrepreneurship due in part to the accelerating popularity of microdramas and TV streaming.
On the brand side, retailers such as Sephora and GAP have launched specialized social commerce platforms and affiliate programs for creators to lean into users’ digital spending habits. Brands are also finding that LinkedIn can serve as a viable B2C marketing channel as new video tools on the platform attract consumer brands beyond a traditional B2B focus. Although older Gen Z and Millennial audiences are growing in size across social platforms, Gen Alpha poses as the new marketing machine for brands, given their rising spending power and cultural influence. Of course, brands continue to look to creators for valuable trend insights and content strategy, which is why leading companies are increasingly welcoming influencers into C-Suite creative roles and prioritizing co-creation across major creator marketing campaigns.
2. Analyzing 5M+ Creators: Key Trends & Audience Insights
To deliver an accurate and comprehensive view of the creator economy, The Influencer Marketing Factory partnered with HypeAuditor to analyze creator performance, audience demographics, and content trends across over 5M creator accounts. The following are some of TIMF’s top findings, which examine engagement levels, active creator counts, popular content categories, and content performance among creators with predominantly U.S. audiences.
- Maturing Audiences Across All Platforms: The largest audience segment across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube is now 25-34, signaling a maturing creator economy and making this age group the primary target for cross-platform brand campaigns.
- TikTok Boasts Highest Median Engagement Rate vs. Competitors: Hypeauditor’s data reveals that TikTok is the most democratized short-form video platform, with a steady median engagement rate (ER) across all audience sizes.
- Short-Form ERs Dominate Long-Form: Short-form video delivers the strongest engagement across platforms in comparison to long-form content, and according to TIMF, TikTok continues to deliver the strongest and most consistent median engagement rates, YouTube Shorts engagement tends to improve as creators scale, while Instagram Reels often sees engagement dip as follower counts rise.
- Creator Visibility Challenge: 46.2% of Instagram creators, 76% of TikTok creators, 59.1% of long-form YouTubers, and 39.94% of YouTube Shorts creators receive fewer than 1K views per post, which represents how difficult it is to still generate steady and scalable reach across platforms, regardless of follower count.
- Instagram Shifts From Image to Video First Format: According to HypeAuditor, Reels posting cadence grew by 3.8% from 2024 to 2025, all while image posts fell by 6.41%, signaling how creators who rely on static content are losing visibility in 2026.
3. The Influencer Marketing Factory’s 2026 Creator Economy Survey
TIMF surveyed 1,000 U.S.-based content creators to analyze their sentiment towards AI usage, brand deal compensation, and partnership structures. The following are some of the top takeaways from TIMF’s 2026 Creator Economy Survey:
- Creator Revenue Diversification: While ad revenue is the top-earning revenue stream (21.6%) for U.S. creators, product/merch sales and affiliate marketing now represent a combined 21.2% of creator income, demonstrating the growing interest in self-owned revenue streams rather than dependence on brand deals and platform programs.
- The Emerging Creator “Middle Class”: 48.7% of U.S. creators earn under $10K annually, 45.6% earn between $10K-$100K, and 5.7% earn $100K or more, signaling the emergence of a viable “middle class” in the creator economy in 2026.
- Creators Prefer Partnership Stability: 44.9% of content creators value stability, consistency, and deeper brand alignment over one-off brand campaigns.
- Over Half of All U.S. Creators Report Increasing Earnings: More than half (51.5%) of U.S.-based influencers achieved earnings growth year-over-year in 2025, a noteworthy statistic given the algorithm volatility and increased competition that defined last year.
- Creators Point to Strategic Brand Building in 2026: The new wave of creator entrepreneurs is approaching, with video production (22.4%) and branding (20%) being top priorities for skill development and professionalization in 2026.
4. Key Quotes & Takeaways from Industry Experts
The following are exclusive quotes from top leaders and industry experts on what the creator economy will look like this year.
- AI as a Co-Pilot For Human Creativity: “AI will be built into most workflows, helping marketers with tasks like finding and analyzing creators, forecasting performance, and testing messages. Since AI will be everywhere, the ones who succeed will be those who use it to speed up the work but still trust their own judgment, staying in the driver’s seat and leaving AI as a co-pilot. As AI spreads and many touchpoints start to feel generic, this mix of measurable impact and human, community-led content will be a key reason to invest more in influencers.” - Alexander Frolov, CEO & Co-Founder of HypeAuditor
- Creators Building Sustainable Businesses: “Today, creators are spending less time trying to win on individual platforms and considerably more time building sustainable businesses. 2026 is cementing a shift toward ownership, diversification, and direct, authentic relationships with audiences. That means that tools that can help creators manage that complexity matter more than any single algorithm or platform decision.” - Alex Zaccaria, CEO & Co-Founder of Linktree
- The Growing Influence of Creator IP: “The clearest patterns across the strongest social work this year, from brands and creators alike, revealed a shift away from ‘campaign thinking’ and toward programming thinking. The best brands no longer aim to win a single moment; they architect content systems that are serialized, character-driven, community-activated, globally scalable, and increasingly AI-powered. They are behaving less like advertisers and more like IP houses.” - Jared Carneson, Head of Global Social Media at Adobe
- Content Creators vs. Creator Entrepreneurs: “Influencer marketing will shift toward creators who can demonstrate business impact, not just reach, meaning creators who understand audience trust, community, and conversion will outperform those relying on vanity metrics. Platforms will still matter, but creators who think cross-platform and off-platform will be the most resilient. The gap between “content creators” and “creator-entrepreneurs” will widen and the latter will define the next era.” - Gigi Robinson, Founder, Creator, & Author, Hosts of Influence
- Why Niche Communities & Creator Storyelling Win Big: “Creators that hit key audiences and niche communities will find success in a year where brands are eager to go direct to consumers. Creators don’t just endorse, they produce, distribute, and contextualize the message for a specific audience. Trust lives inside communities, not mass reach...Products still need storytellers, and audiences still follow people they trust.” - Brooke Berry, Head of Creator Development at Snap Inc.
For more exclusive insights on influencer marketing, download TIMF’s 2026 Creator Economy Report with over 60 pages of free data and tips here.
About author:
Alessandro Bogliari s a digital entrepreneur and growth marketer. He is the co-founder & CEO of the Influencer Marketing Factory, a global influencer marketing agency that helps brands and companies launch influencer marketing campaigns on TikTok, Instagram and Youtube. Alessandro is also a member of the Forbes agency council and Fast Company executive board.
Reviewed by Asim BN.
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