Why Businesses Give Up on Social Media Marketing
Research, Branding, Packaging, Ad Design, PPC Management
Research, Branding, Packaging, Ad Design, PPC Management
Research, Print Design, Content Creation, Website Design
For years, creators and small businesses have debated where to put links: in the caption, in the first comment, or simply in the bio. In 2025–2026, Meta has now made the answer clearer than ever—and the truth is this:
Meta deprioritizes posts with outbound links in the caption.
And yes—Meta itself has officially recommended using other link placements instead.
Let’s break down what’s actually happening.
In mid‑2025, Meta began showing official recommendations in Page dashboards warning users that including a link in the caption can harm distribution. According to Meta’s own Widely Viewed Content Report:
This means link posts naturally get less reach.
Meta’s official advice:
➡️ Put the link in the first comment, not the caption.
This surfaced directly inside Facebook’s Professional Dashboard across many Pages.
In early 2026, Meta began testing strict link‑posting limits for non‑verified professional accounts:
This is a major shift and further proof that Meta wants users to stay on-platform, not click out.
Across multiple analyses, the reasons are consistent:
Meta’s business model depends on engagement and ad viewing. Outbound links take users away.
✔ Platforms perform better when posts encourage staying, not leaving.
Video content, images, and text posts receive preferential reach.
Outbound links are flagged as lower‑value content.
c. Data proves link posts underperform
Only 2–3% of highly viewed posts include links at all.
This isn’t a myth anymore—it’s documented.
Putting links in comments isn’t a hack—it’s Meta’s recommended best practice.
Instagram still does not allow clickable links in captions or comments.
So Meta recommends sticking with:
Instagram is not part of the “put links in comments” strategy—that applies to Facebook only.
This was emphasized in 2025 when Meta formally clarified platform‑specific rules.
✔ Put links in the first comment
✔ Use compelling text + visuals in the caption
✔ Pin the comment with the link
✔ Test performance differences
✔ Consider Meta Verified if you rely heavily on link posts (Meta is increasingly pay‑to‑play)
✔ Use “link in bio”
✔ Use Story link stickers
✔ Use Reel links if verified
✔ Don’t waste time placing links in comments—they’re not clickable
✔ Threads is starting to show link insights and is becoming link‑friendly
✔ LinkedIn still rewards posts with caption links
Meta is actively suppressing link posts in Facebook captions—and has explicitly said so.
If your goal is reach, keep your captions link‑free.
Facebook = “links in comments”
Instagram = “link in bio”
Threads = becoming link‑friendly
LinkedIn = keep links in captions
The myth is no longer a myth—Meta confirmed it.