The social media landscape looks quite different in 2025. New platforms are challenging the old giants, and users are increasingly drawn to smaller, more niche communities rather than the massive all-in-one platforms that dominated the 2010s. Whether you’re a marketer, a creator, or just someone who likes staying connected, knowing which apps are actually gaining users (as opposed to just getting hype) matters.
This guide covers the social media apps worth your time in 2025, looking at what makes each one work and who they’re best suited for.
The big shift this year is that users are actively looking for alternatives to the major platforms. Concerns about algorithm transparency, how their data gets used, and just general fatigue with algorithm-driven feeds have pushed many people toward newer options. It’s not a mass exodus—Facebook and TikTok aren’t going anywhere—but the average person now uses five social apps regularly, up from just three in 2022.
That fragmentation matters. What works on TikTok won’t necessarily work on LinkedIn, and a strategy that spans everywhere usually means optimizing for nothing. Each platform has developed its own culture and expectations, and understanding those differences is what actually moves the needle for anyone trying to build an audience.
Meta still dominates the space, even with all the competition. Facebook holds around 2.9 billion monthly active users—still the biggest platform by a wide margin, especially for people over 30. Instagram has grown into a serious commerce platform, with shopping features woven directly into the browsing experience.
But the real story in Meta’s portfolio is Threads. Originally positioned as a text-based alternative to X, it’s grown into something more interesting: a microblogging platform with over 300 million monthly active users. What sets it apart is the algorithm. Unlike most platforms that maximize watch time above all else, Threads prioritizes conversation quality. The result feels different—more actual discussion, less doom-scrolling through content optimized to keep you engaged.
“Threads has pulled in users who are tired of the noise on bigger platforms,” says digital marketing strategist Jennifer Walsh. “It’s not perfect, but the algorithm feels less manipulative than what you’d find elsewhere.”
TikTok remains the most downloaded app worldwide with over 1.5 billion monthly active users. The recommendation algorithm still outperforms everyone else at finding audiences for creators who haven’t built followings yet—which is why new creators often have an easier time going viral there than on established platforms.
The commerce side has grown significantly too. TikTok Shop has become a real sales channel, with live shopping events pulling millions of concurrent viewers. It’s not quite at the level of a dedicated marketplace, but the integration of entertainment and shopping has influenced how every major platform approaches social commerce.
Bluesky has become the main landing spot for people leaving X after the ownership and policy changes there. The platform has grown to over 40 million monthly active users while developing its own identity beyond just being “the Twitter alternative.”
What makes it different is the decentralized architecture. Users can host their own servers if they want, which appeals to people worried about any single company controlling the conversation. There’s also the “Skyline” feature—a customizable feed system that actually gives users real control. You can stick with chronological posting, create topic-specific feeds, or use personalized recommendations. The choice is yours, not the algorithm’s.
Lemon8, owned by ByteDance (TikTok’s parent company), sits somewhere between Instagram and Pinterest. It’s focused on lifestyle content—fashion, beauty, travel, food—and has gathered over 25 million monthly active users in the US. The aesthetic is very curated, very polished, which appeals to Gen Z users who care about visual presentation.
Brands have noticed. Fashion and beauty companies in particular are finding strong engagement rates, since the audience is already there for exactly that kind of content.
Discord started as a gaming chat platform, but it’s grown well beyond that. Over 200 million monthly active users now, and nearly 40% of server activity comes from non-gaming communities.
The monetization tools have expanded significantly in 2025. Creators can now earn through subscriptions and premium server access, making Discord a legitimate business platform rather than just a hobbyist hangout. For anyone building a community around a specific interest or niche, it’s become one of the most practical tools available.
YouTube Shorts has established itself as a real alternative to TikTok, and it has advantages TikTok doesn’t. The connection to YouTube’s existing creator infrastructure means easier monetization, and creators can use short clips as teasers for longer videos. That ecosystem—short content driving viewers to full-length content and all the revenue streams that come with it—is a major draw.
The numbers bear it out: over 50 billion daily views, with a monetization program that actually pays creators.
Patreon remains the go-to platform for creators who want to earn directly from their audience, bypassing advertising. Around 250,000 creators now earn revenue from over 8 million patrons. The platform added better community features, video tools, and analytics in 2025 to help creators understand who’s actually supporting them.
The model continues to appeal to audiences tired of ads and algorithm-driven content. Paying directly for creators you value feels more honest than being the product sold to advertisers.
LinkedIn has changed more than most people probably realize. It’s no longer just a place to post your resume and look for jobs. Newsletter features, live video streaming, and creator tools have turned it into a content platform where professionals build audiences and thought leadership.
Membership is over 930 million, and time spent on the platform has increased significantly. For anyone in business, marketing, or professional services, LinkedIn has become essential—not optional, just part of doing business.
Slack is still primarily workplace communication, but the social features have grown. Community channels, interest groups, and event planning have blurred the line between work networking and personal connection. It’s not a replacement for dedicated social platforms, but it’s become more than just where you talk to coworkers.
A few things separate platforms that gain traction from ones that flame out:
Privacy features are now expected, not a selling point. Users assume platforms will minimize data collection and give them actual control. If you can’t meet that baseline, it doesn’t matter what other features you have.
Community still matters more than algorithms. Platforms that facilitate real interaction—conversations, connections, genuine engagement—consistently outperform those that just optimize for watch time.
Integration matters. Users don’t want to start from scratch on a new platform. Apps that let you bring your existing audience or connect easily with what you’re already using have a massive advantage over ones that demand a complete fresh start.
The social media landscape in 2025 is more fragmented than ever, with options for every interest and audience. Meta still dominates, but the growth is happening elsewhere—in niche platforms, decentralized alternatives, and creator-focused tools. The key is matching your strategy to the platform that actually fits what you’re trying to do, rather than spreading thin across everywhere.
The platforms will keep evolving. Staying aware of where users are actually spending their time—and why—matters more than ever.
Facebook leads with roughly 2.9 billion monthly active users. TikTok has higher engagement though, especially among younger users, who spend about 95 minutes daily on the platform on average.
Threads has grown fastest among major platforms in 2025, adding over 100 million users since January. Bluesky and Lemon8 are also gaining ground quickly in specific demographics.
Lemon8 has made the biggest splash among newer apps, combining Pinterest-style visual discovery with social features. It’s pulled over 25 million US monthly active users, nearly all Gen Z.
Yes. Threads hit over 300 million monthly active users globally, while Bluesky crossed 40 million. Both are benefiting from users leaving X and people looking for alternatives to algorithm-heavy platforms.
It depends on what you’re creating, but TikTok and YouTube Shorts offer the best mix of reach and money-making potential for most people. If you already make long-form YouTube content, Shorts is a natural fit. If you’re focused purely on short video, TikTok still edges ahead.
The biggest shifts: users are spreading across more platforms instead of sticking to one, privacy features are now standard, decentralized platforms are getting real traction, and shopping features have become standard. The era of one platform doing everything is over—now it’s about picking the right tool for your specific goals.
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