Nano Facebook creators
Nano influencers are creators with smaller, high-trust audiences who can turn product seeding, local launches, and UGC programs into authentic peer-to-peer recommendations.
Audience size
1k-10k
Use this range to shortlist creators by campaign scale before narrowing by platform or category.
Use these creators when the campaign goal matches their audience scale and expected production style.
Product seeding and first-party UGC programs
Local launches with niche audience fit
Testing creator angles before scaling spend
Use these ranges as a first planning reference. Final creator pricing depends on deliverables, platform, usage rights, production effort, and category fit.
| Deliverable | Pricing range |
|---|---|
| Instagram post or story sequence | $50-$300 |
| TikTok or short-form video | $75-$500 |
| Usage rights or paid amplification | +25%-100% |
Pricing
Typical 2026 market range: nano influencer collaborations often run from $50-$250 for simple posts, with higher fees for video, usage rights, exclusivity, or rush delivery.
Engagement
Typical engagement benchmark: nano influencers often perform around 4%-8% on Instagram feed content, with stronger short-form video accounts reaching higher when the audience fit is real.
For a pilot, 10-25 creators is enough to learn what works. For always-on programs, many brands plan around 50-150 nano creators per quarter so they can compare creative angles, audiences, and conversion signals.
Some smaller nano creators accept product-only gifting, especially when the product has meaningful value. Creators closer to 10k followers usually expect product plus a modest fee, often in the $50-$250 range for simpler deliverables.
Nano campaigns are strongest for trust, awareness, and reusable creator content. With trackable links or discount codes, fit categories may see roughly 0.5%-2% conversion on click-through traffic, but performance depends heavily on offer, audience fit, and creative quality.
Give creators a clear brief with key messages, required claims, and disclosure rules, but let them write in their own voice. Over-scripted nano content usually loses the peer recommendation effect that makes this tier valuable.
Every paid or gifted collaboration should be clearly disclosed with labels such as #ad, #sponsored, or platform paid-partnership tools. Put disclosure requirements in the brief and contract before content goes live.
The biggest mistake is treating nano creators like cheap media inventory. Nano programs work best when brands build real relationships, pay on time, keep briefs clear, and give creators room to make native content.
Open the creator listing with the Nano audience-size filter already applied.