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Facebook Likes or Shares: Which Do I Want More of?

Blog Social Media Facebook Likes or Shares: Which Do I Want More of?

January 12, 2026 by Beth

A person sits cross-legged in a meditative yoga pose, with a sun above their head and two leafy branches on either side, symbolizing balance and mindfulness—much like considering facebook shares vs likes for harmony in social interactions.

What Is a Facebook Like Worth?

The average Facebook user probably doesn’t over-think their actions on Facebook. Most people don’t even bother with an engagement other than the first one listed, which is “Like”. However, when they connect with the content and feel it is interesting, enlightening, or funny enough, Facebook users will comment and share. So, are all actions on Facebook equal when it comes to marketing efforts? Let’s break things down!

The Value of Fan Actions

As a Facebook marketer, you want people to engage with your content. They can do this a number of ways, including private messaging you, clicking links to your website, tagging people, leaving reviews, or posting to your page. However, liking, commenting, and sharing are the three common most actions used by Facebook users.

People can engage by clicking “Like”, “Love”, “Care”, “Angry”, “Wow”, or “Sad”.

If content goes uninteracted with, its visibility quickly drops. Facebook’s algorithm deprioritizes posts that fail to generate meaningful engagement. While “Likes” and other emoji reactions are still counted, they hold less algorithmic weight than they once did. However, they can act as initial signals—a kind of early nudge—to get the algorithm to recognize a post’s relevance. Likes may start the engagement engine, but comments and shares are what truly sustain momentum and expand reach. To rise above the typical 5% fan reach threshold, your content must generate not just passive reactions, but active, conversation-driving interaction.

A white thumbs-up icon outlined in blue is centered on a solid blue circular background, symbolizing facebook shares and highlighting engagement beyond just likes.
Quick Take-away

Post “Likes” might trigger the Facebook Algorithm and allow you to invite people to like your page.

People can engage by commenting.

This is usually the most desired action by Facebook marketers. When people leave comments, photos, questions, or even .gifs in the comments section of posts, it spurs additional people to comment. This is how valuable conversation happens, community builds, and valuable feedback or insights are gathered. Comments also trigger the Facebook Algorithm to re-engage people by showing the post more prominently (and continually) in their newsfeed for much longer if they have commented on it. Conversations (when your followers reply back and forth within comments) can create even greater exposure for that post. Posts can also reach some people outside of your fan page, as they see what their friends are commenting on.

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Quick Take-away

Comments trigger the Facebook Algorithm to show the post more prominently, especially to people who have previously commented on your post or have frequently/recently engaged with your page.

People can engage by sharing.

This is the ideal action as sharing takes your content to a broader audience, helps your visibility and reach, and serves as a subtle referral. People share things they want others to see. Depending on individual security settings, page administrators might be able to see who shared the content and further engage on their post. While Facebook has frowned upon people for specifically telling others to share a post, creating quality content that your Facebook community cares about heightens the likelihood that your post will get shared. Ask yourself, is this something someone would want to share?

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Quick Take-away

Sharing is a guaranteed reach outside your network of fans, triggers the Facebook algorithm, and serves as a subtle referral to others.

A Facebook comparison chart with three columns: Shares, Comments, and Likes. Facebook shares have the highest value, comments drive engagement, while facebook shares vs likes shows that likes provide the lowest value and are quick to give.

Which is Better, a Facebook Comment, Share or Like?

All engagement is good, but if you can get your Facebook posts shared, your community will grow and you’ll get better engagement. Sharing gives you great insight into what content your audience wants to see. Likes are fine, comments are great, and shares are the best! Want more in depth statistics on Facebook user behavior? Check out the recent findings by HootSuite.

Filed Under: Social Media

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