Social Media Character Limits: The Complete 2024 Guide
Every Platform's Character Limits at a Glance
Here's a comprehensive reference table of character limits across major platforms:
Twitter/X:
- Tweet: 280 characters (25,000 for X Premium)
- Bio: 160 characters
- Display name: 50 characters
- URL: always counted as 23 characters
LinkedIn:
- Post: 3,000 characters (220 visible before 'more')
- Article title: 100 characters
- Connection request: 300 characters
- Headline: 220 characters
- About section: 2,600 characters
Instagram:
- Caption: 2,200 characters (125 visible)
- Bio: 150 characters
- Comment: 2,200 characters
- Hashtags: 30 per post
TikTok:
- Caption: 2,200 characters
- Bio: 80 characters
YouTube:
- Title: 100 characters (70 recommended)
- Description: 5,000 characters
- Tags: 500 characters total
The 'Preview Problem': Why Your First 140 Characters Are Everything
On LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, and most platforms, your audience sees only the first 140–280 characters before a 'see more' / 'show more' truncation.
This means your hook must be in the first sentence. The rest of your content — no matter how valuable — will only be seen by people who click through.
High-performing first sentences follow these formulas:
- Bold claim: 'I doubled my freelance income in 6 months. Here's the exact system:'
- Surprising statistic: '73% of LinkedIn posts get zero engagement. Here's why...'
- Provocative question: 'What if everything you know about productivity is wrong?'
- Story opener: 'In 2019 I was $40,000 in debt. Last month I hit $20k MRR.'
The job of the first line is to make the reader click 'see more'. The job of the rest is to deliver on that promise.
Hashtag Strategy by Platform
Hashtag best practices differ significantly between platforms:
Instagram: Up to 30 hashtags, but 3–5 highly relevant ones outperform 30 generic ones. Place them at the end of the caption or in the first comment.
Twitter/X: 1–2 hashtags maximum. They eat into your 280-character limit. More than 2 looks spammy and reduces engagement.
LinkedIn: 3–5 hashtags, placed at the end of the post. LinkedIn's algorithm actively boosts posts with relevant hashtags. Avoid overly broad ones (#business, #success) — they're too competitive.
TikTok: 3–5 hashtags mixing trending (#fyp, #foryou) with niche-specific ones. Trending hashtags get you initial reach; niche hashtags find your actual audience.
YouTube: Hashtags in descriptions (max 15) appear above the title. First 3 hashtags are shown most prominently.