The 5 hook types that consistently stop the scroll
Strong hooks follow recognisable patterns. These five work consistently across every major platform in 2026, but how you execute them shifts depending on where you’re publishing.
1. Curiosity gap
You hint at something they need to know without revealing it upfront. This creates tension that makes scrolling past feel risky.
On TikTok and Reels, this works best as a spoken opener: “The thing no one tells you about growing on Instagram…” On carousels and static posts, lead your cover slide with the gap, not the answer. On LinkedIn, the curiosity gap hook in a caption’s first line consistently outperforms informational openers.
Watch out for vague teases that don’t deliver. The gap needs to close with something genuinely worth the wait.
2. Contrarian
You challenge something your audience assumes to be true. This triggers either disagreement or curiosity, both of which stop the scroll.
“Posting daily isn’t why you’re not growing.” That line works because it names a belief your audience holds and challenges it in one sentence. The viewer needs to know if you’re right.
Contrarian hooks perform particularly well on LinkedIn and Instagram, where confident takes tend to drive more engagement. On TikTok, they work better paired with a visual payoff in the first frame, the hook and the scene need to reinforce each other.
3. Story (mid-action open)
You open in the middle of something that’s already happening. This bypasses the “should I keep watching” threshold because the story has already started.
“I was three months away from quitting when this happened…” That’s a story hook. The viewer is already inside the narrative before they’ve decided to engage.
Story hooks are the format most native to TikTok’s long-form video and Instagram Reels. They’re less effective on static content but translate well to carousel storytelling when the first slide drops the viewer into the moment.
4. How-to
You promise a specific, actionable outcome. The brain pattern-matches “how to” with “something I can use” — and that’s enough to earn the pause.
The key is specificity. “How to batch your content” is weaker than “How to film a week of content in 90 minutes.” The more specific the outcome, the stronger the hook. On YouTube Shorts, how-to hooks dominate top-performing content because the platform skews toward intentional, search-adjacent viewing behaviour.
5. Social proof
You lead with a result. “I went from 200 to 40,000 followers in six months. Here’s what actually changed.” The outcome creates curiosity about the process.
Social proof hooks perform consistently on Instagram Reels and TikTok because both platforms have strong creator-aspiration cultures. Audiences on those platforms are actively looking for proof that growth is achievable. The result you lead with needs to be specific and credible; round numbers feel made up.
‘s free Scroll-Stopping Hooks Guide has 50 fill-in-the-blank templates across all eight hook categories — each with a worked example showing exactly how to apply it to your niche. Whether you’re writing captions, scripting Reels, or designing carousel cover slides, this is the resource you’ll use every week.
