Fewer Clicks, Fewer Readers: Social Media Sends Less Traffic to News Sites as Platforms Shift Away from Links

Traffic from social media platforms to news outlets has fallen by about a third in three years, as short-form video and in-app engagement replace link sharing.

Over the past three years, social networks have sent far fewer readers to news sites. Data from Similarweb shows that referrals to the top 100 global media domains peaked at roughly 1.75 billion in late 2022 and now hover near 1.22 billion. The decline, close to thirty percent, highlights how the relationship between news organizations and social networks has weakened as the latter move toward formats and tactics that keep users inside their own apps.

Through 2023 and 2024, the drop remained steady. Monthly traffic slipped almost every quarter, with only brief recoveries when new features surfaced or algorithms shifted. By mid-2025, the figure settled around 1.24 billion, showing no sign of returning to earlier levels.

A major factor lies in how platforms now treat external links. The rise of short videos on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube has reshaped what people see in their feeds. Posts that open external sites compete poorly with clips that keep audiences watching within the same app. LinkedIn and X have also reduced the visibility of outbound links, encouraging interactions that stay on the platform rather than sending users elsewhere.

Some networks are testing small adjustments to reverse the slide. X has begun experimenting with a new link format on iOS that allows users to react to posts while browsing external pages, hoping to make link engagement feel less detached. Instagram is also trying clickable link options inside posts, which could make it easier for creators to direct followers to their own sites.

For news publishers, the loss is significant. Many built their distribution strategies on the traffic once supplied by Facebook or Twitter. As those pathways shrink, even the biggest outlets face lower referral volumes and weaker advertising returns tied to that audience flow. Smaller publishers, which relied heavily on social referrals, feel the impact more sharply.

In response, a new niche has grown around link-in-bio tools like Linktree and Beacons. These services help creators and brands guide followers to other destinations, but their benefits to newsrooms remain limited. While they provide an alternative route to external content, they cannot restore the consistent stream of readers that traditional social referrals once delivered. The trend suggests a lasting shift in how people encounter news online. With platforms prioritizing video and in-app activity, links to independent outlets are becoming a secondary pathway rather than the main entry point to information.d engagement loops, the open web feels more distant from where people spend their time online.


Month/YearSocial Traffic Share (Billions)
Sep 20221.732B
Oct 20221.730B
Nov 20221.655B
Dec 20221.582B
Jan 20231.515B
Feb 20231.322B
Mar 20231.438B
Apr 20231.360B
May 20231.401B
Jun 20231.382B
Jul 20231.379B
Aug 20231.347B
Sep 20231.266B
Oct 20231.342B
Nov 20231.209B
Dec 20231.291B
Jan 20241.312B
Feb 20241.214B
Mar 20241.312B
Apr 20241.279B
May 20241.324B
Jul 20241.402B
Aug 20241.378B
Sep 20241.277B
Oct 20241.341B
Nov 20241.358B
Dec 20241.336B
Jan 20251.378B
Feb 20251.266B
Mar 20251.359B
Apr 20251.279B
May 20251.278B
Jun 20251.273B
Jul 20251.287B
Aug 20251.242B
Sep 20251.218B

Notes: This post was edited/created using GenAI tools. Image: DIW-Aigen.

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