Here’s a practical, up‑to‑date guide on what hashtags to use on TikTok and how to build a strategy that actually boosts views and reach in 2026.

How many hashtags to use (and where)

Most current growth guides and social tools now recommend 3–5 highly relevant hashtags per post , not long “walls” of tags.

  • Aim for 3–5 hashtags in the caption.
  • Put them in the caption, not just in the comments, so the algorithm can index your video correctly.
  • Place them at the end of the caption or woven naturally into your text so the hook is still easy to read.

TikTok allows up to 2,200 characters in descriptions now, but creators and platforms observing performance agree that quality beats quantity when it comes to hashtags.

The basic formula: which hashtags to use

Instead of memorizing one master list, use a simple mix each time you post:

  1. One broad “reach” hashtag
  2. One trending/temporal hashtag
  3. One to three niche/content‑specific hashtags

This gives you both discoverability and relevance.

1. Broad “reach” hashtags

These are big, evergreen tags that keep showing up across TikTok.

Examples of broad hashtags in 2025–2026:

  • #fyp
  • #foryou
  • #foryoupage
  • #viral
  • #tiktok
  • #trending
  • #explore
  • #ExplorePage
  • #TikTokTrend

Use one or two of these at most so you don’t look spammy.

2. Trending / time‑sensitive hashtags

These ride current events, months, seasons, and challenges.

Recent examples:

  • Calendar or life‑moment tags:
    • #birthdaymonth, #morningroutine, #dayinthelife, #diml
  • Seasonal / holiday tags:
    • #valentinesday, #galentinesday
  • General feel‑good or routine tags:
    • #happysunday, #newseason

Add one trending hashtag that matches either the time of year, a challenge, or a popular meme that your video clearly fits into.

3. Niche and content‑specific hashtags

These are the ones that usually drive the highest‑quality views and follows because they match what the video is actually about.

Examples by niche:

  • Comedy / entertainment:
    • #comedy, #funny, #memes, #justforfun, #video
  • Lifestyle / daily vlog:
    • #dayinthelife, #diml, #reallifeathome, #GoodVibes
  • Fashion / beauty:
    • #fashion, #ootd, #beautyblogger, #photography
  • Food / recipes:
    • #foodie, #recipe, #lifehack, #5mincraft
  • Learning / creators:
    • #learnontiktok, #behindthescenes, #quotes
  • Family / pets:
    • #family, #weirdpets, #mansbestfriend

Pick 1–3 niche tags that directly describe what’s in your video.

Example hashtag sets (by content type)

Below is a set of ready‑made examples you can adapt. Mix and match, but keep the 3–5 total rule in mind.

Lifestyle vlog (morning routine)

  • #morningroutine
  • #dayinthelife or #diml
  • #fyp
  • #GoodVibes

Comedy skit

  • #comedy
  • #funny
  • #justforfun or #memes
  • #foryoupage

Food / cooking

  • #recipe
  • #foodie
  • #lifehack or #5mincraft
  • #foryou

Fashion / OOTD

  • #ootd
  • #fashion
  • #explore or #ExplorePage
  • #tiktok

Learning / tips

  • #learnontiktok
  • One specific niche (e.g., #lifehack, #behindthescenes)
  • #fyp or #viral

Seasonal / calendar moment (February vibes)

  • #valentinesday or #galentinesday if relevant
  • #birthdaymonth if it fits your story
  • #teamworkmakesthedreamwork for collabs or team content

Simple HTML table of hashtag strategy

You asked for tables returned as HTML, so here’s a compact one you can reuse or adapt:

html

<table>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Hashtag type</th>
      <th>Goal</th>
      <th>Example hashtags (2025–2026)</th>
      <th>How many to use</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>Broad / reach</td>
      <td>Increase general discovery and chance of landing on For You</td>
      <td>#fyp, #foryou, #foryoupage, #viral, #trending, #tiktok</td>
      <td>1–2 per post</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Trending / temporal</td>
      <td>Tap into current events, challenges, or seasonal trends</td>
      <td>#valentinesday, #galentinesday, #happysunday, #birthdaymonth, #newseason</td>
      <td>0–1 per post</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Niche / topic-specific</td>
      <td>Reach people who care about your exact topic</td>
      <td>#comedy, #foodie, #recipe, #ootd, #learnontiktok, #family, #weirdpets</td>
      <td>1–3 per post</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

How to find your own best TikTok hashtags

The most effective hashtags will be specific to your niche and audience , so you should build your own “hashtag bank.” Recent social media guides suggest:

  • Keep a note or spreadsheet with:
    • Sets for each content theme (e.g., “comedy”, “vlog”, “food”, “beauty”).
* Seasonal variants (e.g., back‑to‑school, holidays, Black Friday).
* Performance notes (which sets led to more watch time and completion).
  • Regularly browse your niche on TikTok:
    • Look at top‑performing videos and record which hashtags show up repeatedly.
  • Use hashtag generators and social tools (many blogs now include them) to get fresh suggestions based on your video description.

Then, test different combinations (e.g., 3 vs. 5 hashtags, different mixes of broad vs. niche) and see which ones correlate with higher completion rate and watch time on your analytics.

Mistakes to avoid with TikTok hashtags

Current best‑practice articles all warn against the same pitfalls:

  • Using too many hashtags (walls of 15–20 tags)
    • Can look spammy and may lower engagement; 3–5 focused tags perform better.
  • Using irrelevant or misleading hashtags just because they’re trending
    • The algorithm looks at content, sound, and user behavior; irrelevant tags rarely help.
  • Copy‑pasting the same big block of tags on every single video
    • You want a core set but still adjust based on the exact topic.
  • Hiding hashtags only in comments
    • They’re less effective there for indexing; keep key tags in the caption.

A good rule of thumb: if a hashtag doesn’t describe what’s literally in your video or the audience you want, skip it.

Mini storytelling example

Imagine you post a 20‑second clip making quick overnight oats while getting ready for work. You open with “POV: you’re always late but still want breakfast,” show the steps, then a bite at the end. A smart caption might be:

“Late again but still not skipping breakfast. Priorities.”

Then, add:

  • #morningroutine
  • #foodie
  • #recipe
  • #fyp

That’s four hashtags: one broad, one lifestyle, two food‑niche. Clean, focused, and easy for the algorithm to understand.

Quick TL;DR

  • Use 3–5 hashtags in the caption, not 15–20.
  • Mix: 1–2 broad reach tags, 0–1 trending tag, 1–3 niche tags that describe your exact content.
  • Refresh your sets monthly using current trending lists and what you see performing in your niche.
  • Focus on relevance and watch time; if a hashtag doesn’t fit the video, don’t use it.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.