Skip to main content

How to post a GIF on Instagram

GIFs remain a popular source of entertainment across many different social media platforms. You’d think that Instagram would catch up, especially since uploading a GIF to Facebook is so easy. Since Instagram doesn’t offer native GIF support, posting one is not as straightforward as we’d like it to be.


There is a workaround, however, if you’re willing to convert said GIF into a video file or create a Story first. Once that’s done, you’ll be able to post it on Instagram like you would any other piece of video content. Below, we’ll outline how to do both.

How to add GIFs to a post using Giphy

Giphy is a popular search engine for GIFs, one you may already be using to source your reaction posts. The nice thing about Giphy, besides its robust library, is that the mobile app lets you quickly post to various social networks and automates the video conversion process for Instagram.

Once you find the perfect GIF within the app, tap the image and then the Share icon, which resembles a paper airplane. Afterward, tap the purple-ish Instagram icon on the resulting page to open the Instagram app on your mobile device. From here, you’ll be given the option to add the GIF to either your Story or Feed. Select Feed, and add a caption if desired. That’s it!

There are plenty of other GIF-related apps and websites you can use to post GIFs on InstagramTenor and ImgPlay, for instance, are two noteworthy alternatives to Giphy — but we’ve found Giphy to have the most expansive library and the easiest approach to uploading GIFs to Instagram.

Further reading

How to add GIFs to your Instagram Story … and then to your Feed

Instagram supports GIF stickers in the Story portion of the photo-sharing app. To do so, tap the smiley face icon when using the camera and select GIF, which will bring up a searchable database of GIF stickers within the app.

Here, you can browse trending stickers or search for specific ones using keywords. Once you’ve found one that you’d like to add, tap it. You can pinch with two fingers to make them bigger or smaller, or use one finger to move them around the picture. Add as many as you want, then either tap Your Story — or Your Stories, if you have multiple accounts — to post it.

If you save your image with the GIFs that you posted on your Story, you can also post it to your Feed. It’s a bit tricky, though. The GIFs have to play for more than 3 seconds before looping. If it doesn’t, you’ll get a notification that you can’t post the image to your feed because the “video” isn’t long enough.

Editors' Recommendations

Anthony Thurston
Anthony is an internationally published photographer based in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Specializing primarily in…
Instagram may be adopting this beloved MySpace feature
Instagram app on the Google Play Store on an Android smartphone.

Adding a song to a social media profile? That's not new, especially if you grew up in the MySpace generation. But it might be a new feature for Instagram as the photo and video sharing app has apparently been spotted working on a profile song feature.

According to screenshots posted by developer Alessandro Paluzzi as part of a series of tweets that began on Monday, Instagram appears to be working on a feature that could give its users the option to add a song to their IG profiles.

Read more
Meta plans to bring Avatars to Reels and video chat
A Meta Connect 2022 screenshot showing Mark Zuckerberg avatar.

Meta has announced further plans to expand one of its VR features to its other social media and messaging apps.

On Tuesday, during the keynote of its Meta Connect 2022 event, the parent company of Facebook announced that it would be working on bringing its Horizon social VR avatars to Reels, WhatsApp, and Messenger.

Read more
TikTok pivots to photos while its competitors are still chasing its viral videos
Smartphone with TikTok's Photo Mode all on a white background.

TikTok's competitors have been all over the news recently for essentially copying the short-form video sharing app's  most successful moves. But while everyone else is pivoting to video, TikTok is now taking swings in the other direction: photos.

On Thursday, TikTok announced a slew of new editing and creation features, but the one tool that caught our eye was Photo Mode. Because the image that TikTok shared in its official announcement depicted a photo carousel-style image post that looks a lot like Instagram.

Read more