Instagram is widening the data available to creators inside its professional tools, adding new performance metrics and more tailored guidance aimed at helping users understand what is actually working on the platform. Meta says the update brings creators fresh visibility into audience activity through new Insights signals including total interactions, story shares and poll votes for broadcast channels.
The company has framed the move as part of a broader push to make Instagram’s creator dashboard more practical, not just more crowded. Alongside the added metrics, Meta says creators will also see personalized recommendations and best-practice prompts inside the professional dashboard, covering areas such as creation, engagement, reach, monetization and guidelines.
That matters because creators have been asking for two things at once: better numbers, and better explanations. Raw data on its own can be messy. A creator may see views rise, for example, but still not understand whether people actually stayed, shared, replied or meaningfully engaged. Meta’s latest approach seems to be built around that gap, pairing performance indicators with suggestions on what to do next. That is an inference from Meta’s rollout language, which emphasizes both measurement and action-oriented guidance.
This is not the first time Instagram has deepened its analytics tools. In an earlier creator-focused update, Meta introduced additional Reels insights such as Replays and a retention chart, after previously adding total watch time and average watch time for Reels. The new expansion suggests Instagram is continuing to lean into creator analytics as a competitive feature, especially as short-form video and creator monetization become more central across platforms.
Meta also said its newer best-practices section is designed as an education hub within Instagram’s professional dashboard, with both general advice and personalized tips based on account performance. In other words, the company is trying to turn Insights from a passive stats page into something closer to a coaching tool.
For creators, the practical takeaway is pretty simple. Instagram is giving them more ways to judge not just reach, but response: how often people interact, how stories travel, and whether community tools like polls are actually landing. For smaller creators in particular, that kind of feedback can be more useful than vanity metrics alone.
As of the official announcements reviewed, these updates are part of Meta’s ongoing rollout of creator tools on Instagram, rather than a single standalone “Insights app” relaunch. So the headline holds up, with one small refinement: the update is best described as an expansion of Instagram’s creator analytics and professional dashboard tools, rather than a complete reinvention of Insights.
