BeReal peaked at 73 million monthly active users, then bled down to a fraction of that within two years. Now, with fresh leadership, a redesigned app, and renewed marketing spend, the BeReal comeback is forcing brand teams to ask an uncomfortable question: is this a genuine second act, or a slower-motion replay of the same decline? Before you greenlight another BeReal pilot budget, here’s what actually changed, and what hasn’t.
Why BeReal Is Trying Again
BeReal’s core problem was never the concept. Unfiltered, once-a-day photo prompts tapped into a real cultural fatigue with curated Instagram grids. The problem was retention. Users loved the novelty, posted for a few weeks, then quietly stopped opening the app once the dopamine wore off. Voodoo, the mobile gaming company that acquired BeReal, has spent the past year rebuilding the app around features designed to solve exactly that: multiple daily prompts, direct messaging, and algorithmic discovery feeds that resemble TikTok more than the original single-post format.
That’s a meaningful pivot. It’s also a risk. The entire appeal of BeReal was its refusal to be another algorithmic feed. Layering in discovery and recommendation logic might fix engagement metrics while quietly killing the authenticity premium that made brands curious about it in the first place.
BeReal’s relaunch trades its founding principle — anti-algorithm authenticity — for the same engagement mechanics that made Instagram and TikTok addictive. Brands need to decide if that trade-off still serves their audience.
What’s Actually Different This Time
A few structural changes are worth tracking before you write off BeReal as a zombie platform:
- New monetization infrastructure. BeReal is testing brand profile tools and sponsored prompt formats, a first for a platform that historically had zero ad product.
- Creator-adjacent features. Group BeReals and friend-of-friend discovery mimic the small-network dynamics that made platforms like BeReal appealing to Gen Z in the first place, without fully abandoning intimacy for reach.
- Renewed app store visibility. App intelligence firms have tracked download upticks tied to marketing pushes and app redesign launches, though absolute numbers remain far below the 2022 peak.
- A leaner, more focused user base. Fewer users, but arguably a more committed one. The casual tourists who downloaded BeReal because it went viral on TikTok have mostly left. What remains skews toward people who actually value the format.
None of this guarantees a durable comeback. But it does mean the platform in front of you now is materially different from the one brands wrote off two years ago.
The Brand Case For Re-Entry
Here’s the honest pitch for testing BeReal again: low competition, high signal. Almost no major brand budget is currently allocated to BeReal, which means organic content can still break through without paid amplification. Compare that to Instagram Reels or TikTok, where organic reach for branded content is functionally dead without ad spend behind it.
Gen Z’s fatigue with polished influencer content hasn’t gone away either. If anything, it’s intensified. Surveys from firms like eMarketer continue to show younger consumers rating peer authenticity above production value when evaluating brand trust. BeReal, at its best, is a format built entirely around that instinct. A well-executed BeReal presence, even a small one, can generate outsized brand affinity relative to spend because there’s genuinely nothing else competing for attention in that space.
There’s also a research angle. Brands running BeReal accounts can treat them as low-stakes listening posts, a way to see how Gen Z audiences respond to unfiltered brand content before applying those lessons to bigger channels. Think of it the way some teams use tiered Discord communities to beta-test messaging with a smaller, more engaged group before wider rollout.
The Case Against Jumping Back In
Now the counterweight. Platform risk is real, and BeReal has already proven it can collapse a user base almost overnight. Any brand allocating budget here needs to treat it as an experiment, not a channel. That means no dedicated headcount, no long-term content calendars built around it, and no promises to leadership about sustained reach.
There’s also a measurement problem. BeReal doesn’t have mature analytics infrastructure comparable to Meta Business Suite or TikTok’s creator marketplace tools. Attribution is nearly impossible beyond vanity metrics like screenshots and reactions. If your team is under pressure to justify every dollar with hard ROI numbers, BeReal is going to be an awkward line item in the quarterly report.
And there’s the authenticity paradox worth sitting with: the moment brands show up in volume on a platform built around anti-performance, users notice, and the goodwill evaporates fast. Chipotle and a handful of other early movers got credit for being first. Late arrivals in the relaunch window won’t get the same grace. Novelty capital is a depleting resource on this platform specifically.
A Realistic 2026 Playbook, If You’re Testing
If your brand decides to re-enter, treat it like a controlled pilot, not a campaign launch. Here’s a framework that keeps risk contained while still giving the test a fair shot:
- Set a 90-day evaluation window. Define success metrics before you post anything — follower growth rate, engagement rate per post, and qualitative sentiment in comments. If none of those move meaningfully in 90 days, sunset the account without guilt.
- Assign it to one person, part-time. BeReal doesn’t require a dedicated content team. It requires someone with genuine platform fluency who can post authentically within the daily prompt window without it feeling like a scheduled ad drop.
- Skip the influencer partnership route initially. Paying creators to post polished BeReal content defeats the entire premise. If you’re going to work with creators here, brief them on raw, in-the-moment content only, similar to how brands approach Reddit’s community-first ad guidelines where over-produced content gets penalized by the audience itself.
- Repurpose sparingly, not aggressively. BeReal content can feed into other channels, but strip out anything that looks staged before it goes near Instagram or TikTok. The audiences aren’t the same, and the tolerance for polish is inverted.
- Watch the ad product rollout closely. If BeReal’s sponsored prompt formats mature into something with real targeting and measurement, that changes the calculus. Track it the way you’d track any emerging ad unit, comparable to how brands evaluated early Snapchat AR lens campaigns before committing real budget.
Who Should Actually Test This
Not every brand belongs here, and that’s fine. BeReal makes the most sense for consumer brands with a genuine Gen Z customer base, particularly in food and beverage, beauty, fashion, and collegiate-adjacent categories. B2B brands, financial services, and anything requiring compliance review on every post should sit this one out entirely. The format’s entire value proposition, spontaneity and imperfection, is structurally incompatible with legal review cycles.
If your brand already runs a lean, fast-moving social team comfortable posting without heavy approval chains, BeReal is a low-cost way to reach an audience that’s increasingly skeptical of anything that smells like marketing. If your approval process takes longer than the app’s two-minute posting window, don’t bother. You’ll either miss the window constantly or produce content so sanitized it defeats the platform’s purpose.
It’s also worth comparing opportunity cost against other emerging or underpriced channels. Teams evaluating BeReal should be asking the same questions they’d ask about Threads’ reply-first distribution model or other early-stage platforms: is the audience size and quality worth the operational overhead relative to doubling down on channels that already work?
What The Data Says About Gen Z Platform Fatigue
Broader research on youth social media habits, including studies referenced by HubSpot and Sprout Social, consistently shows Gen Z consumers maintaining active presences across four to six platforms simultaneously, but concentrating actual engagement on just one or two. That fragmentation is BeReal’s biggest structural headwind. Attention is finite, and the platforms winning that competition right now, TikTok, Instagram, and increasingly YouTube Shorts, have years of algorithmic refinement and creator infrastructure behind them.
BeReal’s relaunch bet is that authenticity fatigue with algorithmic feeds will drive a migration back toward unfiltered formats. It’s a reasonable bet. It’s not a guaranteed one. Brands should treat this exactly like they’d treat any early-stage platform reappearance: cautiously optimistic, resource-light, and ready to pull out fast if the metrics don’t materialize within a quarter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is BeReal worth testing for brands in 2026?
For consumer brands targeting Gen Z with a fast-moving, low-approval-overhead social team, yes, as a contained 90-day pilot. For B2B brands or anything requiring heavy compliance review, the format’s spontaneity requirement makes it a poor fit.
Does BeReal have an advertising product for brands?
BeReal is testing brand profile tools and sponsored prompt formats, but the ad infrastructure remains far less mature than Meta or TikTok’s platforms. Measurement and targeting capabilities are still limited.
How is the new BeReal different from the original app?
The relaunched app adds multiple daily prompts, direct messaging, group posting features, and algorithmic discovery feeds, moving away from the original single-daily-post, chronological-only format.
What metrics should brands track during a BeReal pilot?
Follower growth rate, engagement rate per post, and qualitative comment sentiment over a defined window, typically 90 days, before deciding whether to continue or sunset the account.
Should brands use paid influencers on BeReal?
Generally no, at least initially. Paid, polished creator content undermines the platform’s core appeal. If creator partnerships are used, brief them strictly for raw, unstaged content.
Bottom line: allocate a small test budget, assign one owner, set a 90-day exit clause, and judge BeReal on engagement quality, not follower counts. If it doesn’t earn its place by the next planning cycle, move that budget to a channel that’s already proven itself.
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