Social Media

Under Armour's Social Media Playbook: 22M Followers, $5.2B in Revenue, and the Athlete-First Strategy Behind It All

Platform-by-platform breakdown of Under Armour's 22M+ follower social strategy across Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, LinkedIn, and Pinterest — from #ProtectThisHouse to Project Rock.

Updated March 2026 7 platforms analyzed $5.2B FY2025 revenue
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22M+
Total followers
7
Active platforms
634M+
Earned impressions
$500M
Marketing budget

First: Why Should You Care About Under Armour's Social Media?

22M+ followers, elite athlete partnerships, and the campaign-driven playbook of a $5.2B public company

Under Armour is the rare brand that built its social media presence on athlete credibility rather than influencer volume. While most DTC brands chase micro-influencers and TikTok virality, Under Armour signed Stephen Curry, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, and Tom Brady — betting that a smaller number of elite partnerships would outperform a large roster of mid-tier creators. The result is 22M+ followers and campaign-driven spikes that generate hundreds of millions of earned impressions.

22M+

Under Armour has 22M+ followers across 7 platforms — with Facebook (11M) as their largest channel, followed by Instagram (8.3M). This Facebook-heavy distribution is unusual for a sportswear brand and reflects UA's early-mover advantage on the platform during its 2012-2016 peak.

634M+

The 2023 #ProtectThisHouse relaunch generated 634M+ earned media impressions — with 100% positive or neutral sentiment. Under Armour's campaign model prioritizes fewer, bigger moments over always-on content, creating massive spikes that dominate the conversation.

$500M

Under Armour has earmarked ~$500M for marketing — with plans to double their investment in paid social media influencers. For a publicly traded company (NYSE: UA/UAA) with $5.16B in FY2025 revenue, social media isn't a side channel — it's a core growth lever.

Social Presence at a Glance

22M+ followers across 7 platforms — here is where they all sit

Under Armour's social footprint is spread wider than most competitors. Founded in 1996 by Kevin Plank in a Washington, D.C. basement, the brand grew into a $5B+ public company that now maintains active social profiles on 7 major platforms. Unlike newer DTC brands that lead with Instagram and TikTok, Under Armour's largest audience is still on Facebook — a legacy of the platform's dominance during UA's explosive growth years.

11M
Facebook
8.3M
Instagram
972K
X / Twitter
854K
TikTok
841K
LinkedIn
290K
YouTube

Follower Distribution by Platform

Facebook
11M (49%)
Instagram
8.3M (37%)
X
972K (4%)
TikTok
854K (4%)
LinkedIn
841K (4%)
YouTube
290K (1%)
Key insight

Facebook and Instagram account for 86% of Under Armour's total social audience. That's 19.3M of their ~22M followers on just two Meta platforms. This is strategically significant: Facebook accounts for over 45% of UA's social ad spend, meaning their largest organic audience and their largest paid audience are on the same platform — a powerful retargeting loop.

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Platform-by-Platform Breakdown

Deep dive into each channel — followers, content mix, and engagement

Facebook
Under Armour
11M
Page Followers
3-5/week
Post Frequency
45%+
Share of Ad Spend

Facebook is Under Armour's largest platform by follower count — 11 million followers as of March 2026. This is unusual for a sportswear brand in 2026, where most competitors lead with Instagram. UA's Facebook dominance reflects its early adoption of the platform during the 2012-2016 era when Facebook organic reach was still substantial.

Content mix: Product launches, athlete features, campaign videos, and repurposed Instagram content. Under Armour also maintains sub-pages for specific verticals — Under Armour Women (~914K followers), Under Armour Basketball (~714K), and Under Armour Outdoor (~204K).

Strategic role: Facebook now serves primarily as an ad platform and retargeting engine. With 45%+ of social ad spend on Facebook, the organic audience becomes a massive custom audience pool for lookalike targeting and retargeting campaigns.

Instagram
@underarmour
8.3M
Followers
~3.8K
Posts
1-2/day
Post Frequency
~0.07%
Engagement Rate

Instagram is Under Armour's second-largest platform with 8.3 million followers as of March 2026. The engagement rate of ~0.07% (our calculation: ~5,300 avg likes + ~27 avg comments per post / 8.3M followers) is below the 0.48% industry benchmark — a typical scale compression effect for accounts above 5M followers.

Content mix: Athlete-centric product photography, campaign Reels, and behind-the-scenes training footage. Under Armour leans heavily into hero athlete imagery — The Rock in Project Rock gear, Bryce Harper in cleats, Curry in UA footwear. This is a deliberate contrast to competitors who focus on lifestyle/community content.

Growth note: In December 2025, Under Armour had Instagram migrate ~497,000 followers from the @CurryBrand account to @UAbasketball following the Curry Brand separation. This kind of audience consolidation signals a strategic shift toward fewer, stronger brand accounts.

X / Twitter
@UnderArmour
972K
Followers
100%
Tweets w/ Engagement
2-5/day
Post Frequency

X/Twitter is Under Armour's third-largest platform at 972K followers as of March 2026. What stands out is engagement consistency: SPEAKRJ audit data shows 100% of Under Armour's tweets receive engagement, compared to just 25% for competitors like Asics. This suggests a highly engaged, sports-focused follower base.

Content style: Under Armour's X strategy mirrors their overall brand voice — performance-focused, athlete-driven, and campaign-heavy. Posts center around game-day moments, athlete achievements, and product drops. Unlike brands that use X for personality-driven humor, UA keeps the tone professional and aspirational.

Real-time engagement: During major sporting events (NBA playoffs, MLB World Series, NFL Draft), Under Armour ramps up posting with real-time athlete content. Their recent NFL Draft class signings (Cam Ward, Luther Burden III) generated significant conversation.

TikTok
@underarmour
854K
Followers
3-5/week
Post Frequency

TikTok is Under Armour's most underdeveloped major platform at 854K followers as of March 2026. AltIndex data shows UA ranks in the 11th percentile among industry peers for TikTok followers — significantly trailing Nike (9M+), Adidas (5M+), and even newer brands like Gymshark (6.5M).

Content mix: Training clips, athlete partnerships, and product showcases. UA's TikTok content skews more polished and brand-produced than platform-native. Unlike competitors who create TikTok-first content with trending sounds and raw gym humor, Under Armour often adapts existing campaign assets for the platform.

Growth opportunity: This is arguably UA's biggest social media gap. With plans to double paid social influencers, TikTok is the obvious platform to prioritize — especially for reaching Gen Z audiences that the brand has struggled to connect with. Their India campaign with Neeraj Chopra (200M+ reach) shows they can win on short-form video when they commit to platform-specific content.

LinkedIn
Under Armour
841K
Followers
2-3/week
Post Frequency

LinkedIn is Under Armour's employer branding and corporate communications channel. At 841K followers as of March 2026, it's a strong presence for a sportswear brand. Content focuses on company culture, leadership updates, innovation stories, and hiring.

Strategic value: With Kevin Plank's return as CEO and the company undergoing significant restructuring, LinkedIn serves as the primary channel for investor-facing narratives and talent acquisition. Posts about UA's innovation pipeline and retail strategy tend to outperform pure product content here.

YouTube
@underarmour
290K
Subscribers
302M+
Total Views
943
Videos
1-2/week
Upload Frequency

YouTube is Under Armour's long-form storytelling engine. 290K subscribers and 302M+ total views across 943 videos (as of March 2026, SocialBlade). While the subscriber count is modest, the total view count reveals YouTube's true role: campaign distribution. UA's biggest campaign videos — #TheOnlyWayIsThrough, #ProtectThisHouse, Project Rock — live here and accumulate millions of views over time.

Content pillars: Campaign commercials (often 30-90 seconds), athlete feature films, training content, and product technology explainers. The #TheOnlyWayIsThrough campaign, which featured Michael Phelps, Lindsey Vonn, Tom Brady, and Steph Curry, was one of their most successful YouTube-centric initiatives.

View-to-subscriber ratio: At 302M views on 290K subscribers, UA averages ~1,042 views per subscriber — significantly higher than the typical 10:1 ratio. This confirms that UA's YouTube content reaches far beyond its subscriber base through paid media distribution and search.

Platform strategy insight

Under Armour's social strategy is campaign-driven, not always-on. Unlike DTC brands that post 50+ pieces of content per week, UA concentrates resources around major campaigns (#ProtectThisHouse, #TheOnlyWayIsThrough, Project Rock drops) and athlete moments (NBA playoffs, NFL Draft). This creates massive spikes in visibility but leaves gaps between campaigns where engagement dips. It's the inverse of Gymshark's community-first, always-on approach — and it works differently for a $5B public company with a global retail footprint.

Content Strategy: What They Post and Where

Content pillars, posting cadence, and format choices across every platform

Under Armour's content strategy revolves around elite athlete credibility. Where competitors like Gymshark lean into community-generated gym culture, UA leads with world-class athletes in high-production campaign assets. Every content pillar ties back to performance — the brand's core identity since Kevin Plank's original moisture-wicking shirt.

Content Pillar 1

Athlete Performance
Training footage, game-day moments, and athlete-modeled product showcases featuring Curry, The Rock, Harper, and others. This is the backbone of UA's entire content library.

Content Pillar 2

Product Innovation
Technology-focused content around UA HOVR, ColdGear, Project Rock, and Curry Brand footwear. Emphasizes R&D and performance engineering over lifestyle aesthetics.

Content Pillar 3

Campaign Storytelling
#ProtectThisHouse, #IWILL, #TheOnlyWayIsThrough — big-budget, cinematic campaigns that define the brand narrative and generate massive earned media spikes.

Content Pillar 4

Community & Loyalty
UA Rewards program (5M+ members), customer stories, and regional campaigns like ZIDD FOR MORE in India. Building direct relationships beyond athlete endorsements.

Posting Cadence by Platform

Platform Posts/Week Best Formats Peak Times
Facebook 3-5 Video, Product posts 12-2pm ET
Instagram 7-14 Reels, Carousels 6-8am, 12pm, 6-8pm ET
X / Twitter 14-35 Text posts, Video clips 11am-1pm, 5-7pm ET
TikTok 3-5 Training clips, Product drops 7-9am, 12pm, 7-10pm ET
LinkedIn 2-3 Culture, Innovation, Hiring 8-10am ET
YouTube 1-2 Campaign films, Athlete docs Weekday evenings
Takeaway for your brand

Under Armour's total weekly output is estimated at 30-40+ pieces across all platforms. That's lower than always-on brands like Gymshark (50+/week), but UA compensates with higher production value per piece and campaign-driven surges. If you're a brand with limited content resources, UA's model — fewer posts, bigger moments — may be more achievable than the daily-posting grind. Pair it with the right tech stack and you can punch above your weight.

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The Under Armour Athlete Program

Elite athlete partnerships, $15M+ deals, and the Curry Brand separation

Under Armour's influencer strategy is the opposite of the micro-influencer playbook. Instead of signing hundreds of mid-tier creators, UA bets big on a smaller number of elite athletes with massive cultural reach. Stephen Curry, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, and Tom Brady each reportedly command deals worth ~$15M/year — but the brand reach they provide is measured in billions of impressions, not thousands.

Headline Partner

The Rock
Dwayne Johnson's Project Rock line is UA's most commercially successful athlete collaboration. Deal reportedly worth ~$15M/year with dedicated product line, content series, and global campaigns.

Transitioning

Curry Brand
Stephen Curry's partnership is ending in 2026, with the Curry Brand separating from UA. Final Curry 13 shoe releases Feb 2026. Curry becomes a sneaker free agent — a major loss for UA's basketball presence.

Sports Roster

Multi-sport
Bryce Harper (MLB), Freddie Freeman (MLB), Neeraj Chopra (track & field), Kelsey Plum (WNBA). Plus 2025 NFL Draft signings: Cam Ward, Luther Burden III, Nick Emmanwori, Matthew Golden, Tyler Booker.

Growth Plan

2x Influencers
UA plans to double their investment in paid social media influencers, signaling a shift from pure elite-athlete deals toward a broader creator ecosystem. Part of the ~$500M marketing investment.

Signature Campaigns: From #ProtectThisHouse to #TheOnlyWayIsThrough

Under Armour's campaign history reads like a masterclass in brand repositioning. Each major campaign has redefined what the brand stands for — from underdog grit to elite performance to mental resilience. The strategy of reviving heritage campaigns for new generations (like the 2023 #ProtectThisHouse relaunch) gives UA a storytelling advantage that newer brands can't replicate.

2003
#ProtectThisHouse — the campaign that defined UA. Originally launched as a grassroots rallying cry, it generated over 500,000 email and phone responses. The original TV spot became one of the most recognized sports ads of the 2000s. Relaunched in March 2023 with Curry, Kelsey Plum, Aliyah Boston, and Bryson Tucker — generating 634M+ earned impressions with 100% positive or neutral sentiment.
2020
#TheOnlyWayIsThrough — resilience in a pandemic year. A global campaign featuring Michael Phelps, Lindsey Vonn, Tom Brady, and Steph Curry. The campaign earned "billions of worldwide media impressions" per Under Armour. The accompanying podcast garnered 700,000+ downloads. Brand association with "stylish" and "empowering" jumped 900% and 730% respectively.
2024
ZIDD FOR MORE — India breakthrough. An influencer-led campaign featuring Olympic javelin champion Neeraj Chopra. Achieved 200M+ reach, 22M+ engagement, and a 40%+ increase in website traffic from India. Demonstrated UA's ability to win on social when they commit to market-specific, platform-native content.
Ongoing
#IWILL & UA Rewards — the community layer. #IWILL serves as a persistent brand hashtag and community call-to-action. UA Rewards, launched August 2023, already has 5 million members who spend 50% more than non-members and are 3x more likely to repeat purchase within 90 days — proving social-to-loyalty conversion at scale.

Engagement Benchmarks

How Under Armour's rates compare to industry averages

Under Armour's engagement profile reveals a campaign-driven brand, not an always-on community. Their per-post engagement is modest during quiet periods, but campaign surges generate hundreds of millions of impressions. This is a fundamentally different social model from community-first brands like Gymshark.

Platform Under Armour Eng. Rate Industry Average Verdict
Instagram ~0.07% (our calc.) 0.48% Below avg (scale effect)
X / Twitter 100% tweet engagement 25% (Asics comp.) 4x above competitor
TikTok Data limited ~1.5% Insufficient data
YouTube Data limited ~3.0% Insufficient data
Facebook Data limited ~0.06% Insufficient data
Why this matters

The Instagram engagement rate (~0.07%) looks alarming until you understand the model. Under Armour doesn't optimize for daily engagement percentages — they optimize for campaign reach. When #ProtectThisHouse generates 634M+ earned impressions in a single campaign push, the daily engagement rate becomes less meaningful. Meanwhile, X/Twitter shows 100% of tweets receiving engagement (vs. 25% for Asics), suggesting their core audience is highly engaged sports fans, not casual followers. The real question isn't "why is engagement low?" but "does the campaign-surge model actually convert?" — and with $5.16B in FY2025 revenue, the answer appears to be yes.

Curious how your own engagement rates stack up? Get your free report — LeadMaxxing benchmarks your brand against competitors across every platform, automatically.

Key Findings

  • 22M+ total followers across 7 platforms — Facebook (11M) and Instagram (8.3M) account for 86% of total audience, with TikTok (854K) significantly underindexed vs. competitors.
  • #ProtectThisHouse 2023 relaunch generated 634M+ earned impressions with 100% positive or neutral sentiment — proving heritage campaigns can be revived for new audiences (verified fact, Praytell Agency case study).
  • Stephen Curry's partnership is ending in 2026 — the Curry Brand separation removes UA's biggest basketball asset, but frees budget to double paid social influencers across other sports.
  • UA Rewards has 5 million members who spend 50% more and are 3x more likely to repeat purchase within 90 days — social-to-loyalty conversion at scale (verified fact, Under Armour earnings).
  • India campaign with Neeraj Chopra achieved 200M+ reach and 40%+ increase in website traffic — demonstrating UA's potential when they commit to market-specific, platform-native social content (verified fact, Hobo Video case study).

What This Data Means for You

Turning Under Armour's social media strategy into your competitive advantage

Under Armour's social playbook proves that campaign-driven, athlete-first content can build massive brand awareness — but it comes with tradeoffs. Their TikTok underperformance and low daily engagement rates reveal the cost of prioritizing big moments over always-on community building. The lesson for your brand: you don't have to choose one model. The smartest marketers borrow UA's campaign-surge strategy for product launches while maintaining Gymshark-style community engagement between launches. Under Armour's email and CRM strategy converts campaign-driven traffic into loyal customers, their SEO engine captures the branded search demand that social generates, and their pricing and positioning strategy ensures the traffic converts at scale.

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5 Things You Can Implement Today

Actionable lessons from Under Armour's social media playbook

Run Campaign Surges, Not Just Always-On Content

Under Armour's #ProtectThisHouse generated 634M+ impressions in a single campaign push. Instead of posting daily and hoping for engagement, concentrate resources around 3-4 major campaign moments per year. LeadMaxxing tracks when competitors run campaign surges so you can time your pushes to avoid collision or capitalize on gaps.

Invest in Long-Term Athlete or Creator Partnerships

UA's multi-year deals with The Rock and Curry prove that long-term partnerships compound in value. One-off influencer posts don't build brand association. LeadMaxxing identifies which competitor partnerships are driving real engagement vs. vanity metrics, so you can structure your own deals smarter.

Revive Heritage Campaigns for New Audiences

Under Armour's 2023 #ProtectThisHouse relaunch turned a 20-year-old campaign into 634M+ earned impressions. If your brand has legacy campaigns, don't retire them — reimagine them. LeadMaxxing's competitive analysis shows which brand narratives resonate most in your market.

Build a Social-to-Loyalty Pipeline

UA Rewards has 5M members who spend 50% more. Social media should feed your loyalty program, not just your brand awareness. LeadMaxxing tracks competitor loyalty and retention strategies so you can build a pipeline that converts followers into repeat buyers.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many Instagram followers does Under Armour have?
Under Armour has approximately 8.3 million Instagram followers as of March 2026. Instagram is their second-largest platform behind Facebook. Their engagement rate is roughly 0.07% (our calculation based on ~5,300 average likes per post), which is below the 0.48% industry benchmark — a common scale effect for accounts above 5M followers.
What social media platforms does Under Armour use?
Under Armour is active on 7 major platforms as of March 2026: Facebook (11M followers), Instagram (8.3M), X/Twitter (972K), TikTok (854K), LinkedIn (841K), YouTube (290K subscribers), and Pinterest (active). Facebook is their largest platform by follower count, which is unusual for a sportswear brand — most competitors lead with Instagram.
What is Under Armour's influencer marketing strategy?
Under Armour's influencer strategy centers on elite athlete partnerships rather than micro-influencer volume. Key ambassadors include Stephen Curry (partnership ending 2026), Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson (Project Rock line, reportedly ~$15M/year), Tom Brady (reportedly ~$15M/year with equity), Bryce Harper, and Neeraj Chopra. They plan to double paid social media influencers as part of a ~$500M marketing investment.
How does Under Armour's #ProtectThisHouse campaign work?
#ProtectThisHouse is Under Armour's signature campaign, originally launched in 2003 and relaunched in March 2023. The 2023 relaunch featured Stephen Curry, Kelsey Plum, Aliyah Boston, and Bryson Tucker, generating 634M+ earned media impressions with 100% positive or neutral sentiment, according to Praytell Agency's case study. The original 2003 campaign generated over 500,000 email and phone responses.
How often does Under Armour post on social media?
Under Armour's posting frequency varies by platform: Instagram sees 1-2 posts per day, X/Twitter averages 2-5 tweets daily, Facebook posts 3-5 times per week, TikTok 3-5 times per week, LinkedIn 2-3 times per week, and YouTube uploads 1-2 videos per week. Total content output across all platforms is estimated at 30-40+ pieces per week.
Who are Under Armour's most famous athlete ambassadors?
Under Armour's highest-profile ambassadors include Stephen Curry (NBA, partnership ending in 2026 as the Curry Brand separates), Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson (Project Rock line), Tom Brady (NFL, retired — deal reportedly included equity), Bryce Harper (MLB), Freddie Freeman (MLB), and Neeraj Chopra (Olympic javelin champion, key for India market). Recent NFL Draft signings include Cam Ward and Luther Burden III.
How does Under Armour's social engagement compare to competitors?
Under Armour's Instagram engagement rate (~0.07%, our calculation) is below the 0.48% industry average, largely due to scale compression at 8.3M followers. On X/Twitter, SPEAKRJ data shows 100% of Under Armour's tweets receive engagement, compared to just 25% for competitors like Asics. Their campaign-driven approach generates massive spikes — #ProtectThisHouse alone delivered 634M+ earned impressions.
What is Under Armour's social media marketing budget?
Under Armour has earmarked approximately $500 million for marketing, with plans to double their investment in paid social media influencers. Facebook accounts for over 45% of their social ad spend, with Instagram and YouTube close behind. This investment supports a publicly traded company (NYSE: UA/UAA) with $5.16 billion in FY2025 revenue.

Sources & References

SocialBlade — Follower analytics, growth tracking, and historical data for Under Armour across Instagram, YouTube, and Facebook.
socialblade.com
Under Armour Newsroom — Official press release for the 2023 #ProtectThisHouse campaign relaunch with 634M+ earned impressions data.
about.underarmour.com
Stock Analysis — Under Armour revenue data, financial performance, and quarterly earnings for NYSE: UA/UAA.
stockanalysis.com
CNBC — Coverage of Under Armour's #TheOnlyWayIsThrough campaign launch featuring Phelps, Vonn, Brady, and Curry.
cnbc.com
ESPN — Reporting on Stephen Curry ending his partnership with Under Armour and the Curry Brand separation.
espn.com
SPEAKRJ — Twitter/X audit showing 100% tweet engagement rate and YouTube channel statistics for Under Armour.
speakrj.com
AltIndex — TikTok follower tracking and social media benchmarking data for Under Armour (UAA ticker).
altindex.com
Hobo Video — Case study analysis of Under Armour's India influencer campaign with Neeraj Chopra (200M+ reach, 22M+ engagement).
hobo.video
Compiled by LeadMaxxing — we track how brands build, test, and optimize their marketing so you can learn from the best.