📊 Data & Trends

Emoji Trends on Social Media in 2025: What's Rising, What's Fading

Social Media Is the Engine of EmojiEmoji
A Japanese word (絵文字) meaning 'picture character' — small graphical symbols used in digital communication to express ideas, emotions, and objects.
Culture

If you want to understand where emoji culture is headed, watch social media. Platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and X are not passive mirrors of emoji usage — they actively shape it. New emojis go viral, old standards get repurposed with ironic meanings, and generational subcultural codes emerge and spread in weeks.

In 2025, the emoji landscape on social media is more dynamic than ever. Here is what the data and platform behavior reveal about the trends that matter this year.

Based on aggregated usage data across major platforms, several emojis have seen outsized growth in 2025:

Emoji Name YoY Growth Trend Primary Platform
🫠 Melting face ↑ Strong TikTok, Instagram
🫶 Heart hands ↑ Strong Instagram, TikTok
🩷 Pink heart ↑ Moderate Instagram, iMessage
🥹 Face holding back tears ↑ Strong All platforms
🫨 Shaking face ↑ Emerging TikTok, X
🩵 Light blue heart ↑ Moderate Instagram
🫡 Saluting face ↑ Moderate X, Reddit
🪩 Mirror ball ↑ Emerging Instagram
💀 Skull ↑ Ongoing (sustained) TikTok, Gen Z everywhere

The melting face 🫠 and shaking face 🫨 have established themselves as go-to emojis for expressing overwhelm, surreal situations, or absurd discomfort — emotional states that social media surfaces endlessly.

TikTok: Fastest Emoji Trend Cycle

TikTok remains the fastest platform for emoji trend propagation. A single viral video can push a niche emoji into widespread use within days.

2025 TikTok emoji patterns: - 🫠 dominates reaction comments — "this is me every time [relatable situation]" - 💀 sustains as the Gen Z laugh reaction, with no sign of displacement - 🧍 (standing person) has emerged as a way to signal awkward or passive presence - 😮‍💨 (face exhaling) is used for expressing relief, exhaustion, or passive-aggressive indifference - 🫶 (heart hands) appears extensively in appreciation comments and creator-to-audience affirmations

TikTok also drives what researchers call "emoji semantic drift" — where an emoji's original meaning is largely replaced by a community-defined one. The 🥀 (wilted rose), for example, has shifted from representing sadness to signaling a specific aesthetic.

Instagram: Heart Emoji Expansion

Instagram's comment culture in 2025 is characterized by heart proliferation. The introduction of new color-variant hearts has fragmented the classic ❤️ into a full palette of social signals:

Heart Emoji Associated Vibe
❤️ Classic love, strong affirmation
🧡 Warmth, friendship
💛 Happiness, best friend energy
💚 Positive energy, wellness
💙 Calm, trust, loyalty
💜 K-pop culture, mystery
🩷 Soft, cute, feminine aesthetic
🩵 Cool, calm, new friendship
🤍 Minimalist, clean aesthetic
🖤 Dark aesthetic, edgy
🩶 Neutral, modern, understated

Influencer and brand accounts on Instagram show particularly high diversity in heart emoji use — treating different color hearts as audience segmentation tools or brand personality signals.

Reels engagement is heavily emoji-driven, with 🔥 (fire) remaining the dominant "this content is good" signal, followed by 😍, 🙌, and 💯.

X (formerly Twitter): Irony and Commentary Emoji

X's emoji culture is shaped by the platform's fast-moving, politically charged, humor-dense environment. The most notable 2025 patterns:

  • 🤡 (clown) continues as the go-to irony and self-own emoji
  • 🫡 (saluting face) has taken on an ironic "yes sir" / sycophancy connotation
  • 🧵 (thread emoji used in post openers) remains a convention
  • 📉 and 📈 are used rhetorically in market, sports, and political commentary
  • 🪦 (headstone) signals "this thing is dead / canceled"
  • 🔴🔴🔴 (triple red circles) is a quasi-convention for alert or emphasis

X also shows the most explicit use of emoji as political shorthand — emojis attached to ideological positions shift rapidly and can render months-old posts confusing without cultural context.

Instagram Stories and Reactions

Instagram's reaction stickerSticker
Larger, more detailed digital images used in messaging apps, often animated, that complement but are separate from standard emoji.
features have made certain emoji functionally different from typed emoji — they appear as interactive overlays. The most used Story reaction stickers in 2025 consistently include 🔥, ❤️, 😂, 😮, and 👏, reinforcing the dominance of these emoji as quick emotional responses.

Declining Emoji: What's Fading in 2025

Not all emoji trends go up. Some emojis are declining in relative usage:

Emoji Decline Reason
😜 Feels dated; replaced by more nuanced alternatives
😛 Low information density; declining across age groups
👌 Association with offensive gesture in some contexts
😏 Overused in 2018–2021; now signals tryhard energy
🙈 Peaked in 2016–2018; usage flat or declining
💁 The "sassy" connotation has faded; feels 2014

This is partly generational cycling — emojis that Gen Z associates with older millennials get actively avoided, while emojis that feel "new" and semantically rich attract adoption.

The UnicodeUnicode
Universal character encoding standard that assigns a unique number to every character across all writing systems and symbol sets, including emoji.
16.0 Effect

Unicode 16.0 emojis became widely available across major platforms in late 2024 and early 2025. Key new additions and their social media trajectory:

  • 🫩 Face with bags under eyes — immediately resonant with burnout content; strong adoption on work-life commentary posts
  • 🪿 Goose — became a meme emoji faster than most; associated with "goose" as a chaotic energy symbol
  • 🫶‍💫 — ZWJZero Width Joiner (ZWJ)
    An invisible Unicode character (U+200D) used to join multiple emoji into a single composite emoji, such as combining people and objects into profession emoji.
    sequences adding new family/relationship combinations showing slow but steady adoption

New emoji typically follow a predictable adoption curve: meme-heavy viral spike in the first months → normalization → integration into regular vocabulary within 12–18 months.

Brand and Marketing Emoji Use in 2025

Brand social media accounts have become sophisticated emoji users. Current patterns:

  • Brands use 2–3 emoji per post on average, down from the 5+ seen in 2019–2021 (over-emoji backlash)
  • (sparkles) remains the most brand-used emoji across Instagram and LinkedIn
  • (right arrow) has become a convention in LinkedIn post formatting
  • 💡 (light bulb) dominates "tip" and educational content
  • 🚀 peaked in startup culture and is now seen as slightly cliché
  • Luxury brands use emoji sparingly; mass-market brands more liberally

Research from social media analytics firms suggests that posts with 1–3 strategically placed emoji outperform both zero-emoji posts and emoji-heavy posts in engagement metrics — suggesting the market is self-correcting for emoji saturation.

Emoji in Hashtag Culture

While hashtags have declined in effectiveness on some platforms, emoji + hashtag combinations remain culturally significant:

  • #️⃣ meta-awareness of hashtag culture
  • Holiday emoji attached to seasonal hashtags (#🎃, #🎄) reliably spike traffic during their season
  • Cause-related emoji (🎗️ ribbon colors for awareness, 🏳️‍🌈 for Pride) function as searchable cultural markers

The data from 2025 points toward several durable trends:

  1. Expressiveness over literalism — emojis that capture emotional nuance (🥹, 🫠, 😮‍💨) are winning over blunt happy/sad faces
  2. Color variants fragmenting — especially hearts, enabling finer social signaling
  3. Irony layering — the same emoji can mean opposite things depending on context and platform
  4. Platform divergence accelerating — TikTok, Instagram, and X emoji cultures are diverging, not converging

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Glossary Terms

Emoji Emoji
A Japanese word (絵文字) meaning 'picture character' — small graphical symbols used in digital communication to express ideas, emotions, and objects.
Sticker Sticker
Larger, more detailed digital images used in messaging apps, often animated, that complement but are separate from standard emoji.
Unicode Unicode
Universal character encoding standard that assigns a unique number to every character across all writing systems and symbol sets, including emoji.
Zero Width Joiner (ZWJ) Zero Width Joiner (ZWJ)
An invisible Unicode character (U+200D) used to join multiple emoji into a single composite emoji, such as combining people and objects into profession emoji.

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