Major League Baseball’s expanded multi-year partnership with TikTok, announced in late February 2026, represents far more than a simple content distribution deal. It’s a calculated bet on the future of sports consumption, a blueprint for turning viral moments into measurable business outcomes, and perhaps most critically, an admission that the next generation of baseball fans won’t be found where previous generations were.
The numbers tell a compelling story:
Posts using #MLB grew nearly 60% in 2025, with over 10.7 million followers across MLB’s global accounts.
During the 2025 World Series alone, MLB’s international accounts saw views surge 426% in Japan and 710% in Korea year-over-year.
But the real story isn’t about vanity metrics, it’s about whether baseball can convert attention into attendance, engagement into revenue, and viral moments into lifelong fans.
The Second-Screen Reality
The partnership centers on a critical insight that reshapes how we think about live sports consumption: 85% of fans use TikTok as a second-screen experience during live events. This isn’t a problem to be solved, it’s a reality to be optimized.
“We know fans, young fans, especially, diverse fans, are spending a lot of time on TikTok, and we want to find a way to make sure they know where to find our live games as well,” explained Alex Cadicamo, MLB’s VP of Media Business Development and Strategy.
This represents a fundamental shift in sports marketing strategy.
The old model was binary: you either watched the game or you didn’t.
The new model is omnipresent: fans are simultaneously consuming live action, social commentary, behind-the-scenes content, and creator-generated analysis.
MLB isn’t fighting this fragmentation; they’re building infrastructure to own it.
TikTok GamePlan: The Strategic Infrastructure
At the heart of this partnership is TikTok GamePlan, a comprehensive product suite designed to help sports partners drive discovery, deepen engagement, and deliver measurable business results.
For MLB, this means:
A dedicated MLB Hub serving as a centralized destination for game highlights, memorable moments, and creator-generated content
In-app tools to drive content discovery across domestic and international markets, including Europe, Japan, Korea, and Mexico
Analytics dashboards to understand fan behavior and identify trending conversations
Anchor links on relevant videos that direct fans to official accounts, schedules, standings, and ticket purchasing options
That final bullet point is critical. TikTok GamePlan isn’t just about engagement; it’s about conversion. The partnership is explicitly designed to turn social media interactions into ticket sales, merchandise purchases, and live viewership.
“TikTok GamePlan gives MLB the tools to turn fandom into measurable business results,” noted Rollo Goldstaub, TikTok’s Global Head of Sport. “We’re providing a platform for fans to experience everything from walk-off celebrations to clubhouse moments, authentic storytelling, and inside access they can’t get anywhere else.”
The Global Expansion Strategy
Perhaps the most strategically significant element of this partnership is the international focus. MLB is leveraging TikTok to accelerate growth in markets where baseball already has cultural traction, and to seed interest in emerging markets.
The league’s localized accounts (@mlbespanol, @mlbeurope, @mlbjapan, @mlb_korea, @mlbmexico) aren’t just translating American content; they’re creating region-specific narratives that celebrate how baseball is “seen and played and celebrated in these different countries,” as Cameron Gidari, MLB’s VP of Social Media and Innovation, explained.
“The beauty of baseball is that it is such a global sport,” Gidari continued. “You walk into a clubhouse, and you hear English, different dialects of Spanish, Korean, and Japanese, all being spoken in the same place. We want to bring to life how baseball is seen, played, and celebrated in these different countries because that brings a lot of uniqueness. And frankly, it’s uniqueness that only baseball can offer.”
This global strategy is particularly important given baseball’s international talent pipeline. Stars like Shohei Ohtani don’t just play for American audiences; they bring entire international fanbases with them. The 2025 World Series viewership surge in Japan and Korea wasn’t accidental; it was the culmination of years of international player development finally translating into market opportunity.
The Creator Economy Integration
One of the partnership’s most innovative elements is MLB’s decision to grant select creators access to both current and archival content. This represents a significant shift in how professional sports leagues think about intellectual property.
Historically, leagues have been fiercely protective of game footage, pursuing copyright claims against unauthorized use. MLB is now embracing the opposite strategy: empowering creators to “remix” historic baseball moments for modern audiences, betting that creator-led storytelling will drive more engagement than policed exclusivity.
During spring training, TikTok established exclusive lounges at MLB Player Houses in Arizona and Miami, where sports creators work directly with Major Leaguers to co-create content. This isn’t just about teaching players to post; it’s about building authentic connections between athletes and fans who consume sports differently from their parents.
“It is getting them comfortable being on this platform, understanding that they all bring something unique and different, and that it doesn’t have to be daunting or imposing to create a TikTok,” Gidari said.
The player engagement component is critical for several reasons.
It decentralizes content creation, making every player a potential brand ambassador.
It creates authentic moments that can’t be replicated through official league channels.
It helps players build personal brands that extend beyond their on-field performance, an increasingly important factor in an era when NIL, endorsements, and post-career opportunities depend on social media followings.
The Fragmentation Challenge
Yet beneath the optimistic announcements lies a more complex reality. As Cadicamo acknowledged, the streaming era has created significant challenges for sports viewership: “We’re looking at our MLB-owned and operated products, our social media relationships, and basically saying, ‘How can we make this as easy as possible for fans?’”
The fundamental tension is this: social media engagement is free, but live sports consumption increasingly isn't. Fans can watch highlight reels, follow creators, engage with player content, and feel connected to baseball without ever paying for a streaming service or buying a ticket. As The Verge noted, “The challenge with relying on social media to engage audiences is that it is cost-free for potential fans; they can easily watch players having fun or participating in viral TikTok trends without any financial commitment”.
This creates a strategic paradox. MLB needs social media to reach younger audiences, but those audiences may never convert to revenue-generating customers if they can satisfy their sports appetite through short-form content alone.
Content Strategy and Season-Long Engagement
MLB’s TikTok content strategy is designed to maintain year-round engagement beyond the 162-game regular season schedule:
Thrilling highlights after every game
Long-form videos recapping each series
Weekly roundups showcasing the most exciting baseball moments
Behind-the-scenes content from clubhouses and player experiences
Creator-led analysis and commentary
Archival content that connects baseball history to current narratives
The emphasis on long-form video content (relative to TikTok’s typical short-form nature) is particularly interesting. MLB is betting that once fans are engaged, they’ll consume increasingly substantive content, essentially using short-form clips as top-of-funnel content to drive deeper engagement.
The Broader Industry Context
MLB’s TikTok partnership doesn’t exist in isolation. TikTok has systematically built sports partnerships across multiple leagues and properties, including deals with the International Ski Federation ahead of the 2026 Winter Olympics and with FIFA ahead of the 2026 World Cup.
This represents TikTok’s strategic push into sports content as a platform growth driver, and sports leagues’ recognition that TikTok represents where younger audiences actually spend time.
For sports business professionals, several broader trends are worth noting:
Platform-specific content strategies are now mandatory. Generic “post everywhere” strategies no longer work. Each platform requires dedicated resources, customized content, and platform-native storytelling.
Second-screen experiences are primary experiences. The complementary screen has become the companion screen. Sports properties must design for multi-screen engagement rather than treating it as a distraction.
Creator partnerships are partnership agreements. Giving creators access to official content isn’t just permission, it’s collaboration. The most successful sports properties will be those that empower rather than police.
International expansion requires localized authenticity. Translation isn’t localization. Success in international markets requires region-specific content that celebrates local connections to the sport.
Measurable business outcomes matter more than vanity metrics. Growth in followers and views is meaningless without conversion pathways to ticket sales, viewership, and merchandise revenue.
The Pace Problem
Yet one critical question remains largely unaddressed: can baseball’s methodical pace align with the attention economy’s demand for constant stimulation? As Tubefilter bluntly asked, “Will attention-deficit TikTok types appreciate the methodical pace of a typical baseball game?”
This isn’t about whether young people have short attention spans; it’s about whether baseball’s inherent rhythm can compete in an entertainment landscape optimized for dopamine hits. A three-hour game with dozens of pitches between action sequences may not translate well to audiences conditioned by algorithmically optimized content designed to maximize engagement.
MLB’s bet is that by owning the highlight-to-live-game pathway, it can guide fans from short-form consumption to long-form viewership. But this assumes fans want to make that journey, and that’s far from guaranteed.
Business Model Implications
For sports business professionals, the MLB-TikTok partnership raises important strategic questions:
What’s the appropriate investment level in platforms you don’t own? MLB is dedicating significant resources to building a TikTok presence, but ultimately exists at the platform’s discretion. Algorithm changes, policy shifts, or platform decline could undermine years of investment.
How do you measure ROI on social engagement? If 85% of fans use TikTok as a second screen, how much of that engagement converts to primary consumption? What attribution models make sense when engagement is multi-platform and conversion pathways are complex?
What’s the relationship between highlight consumption and full-game viewership? Does watching highlights increase interest in live games, or does it satisfy curiosity without requiring further engagement? The answer likely varies by fan segment, but has major implications for content strategy.
How should leagues balance official content with creator content? Empowering creators means ceding some narrative control. Where’s the line between collaboration and chaos?
What’s the lifecycle value of a social media fan versus a traditional fan? If younger fans primarily engage through social platforms, what’s their lifetime revenue potential compared to fans who attend games, subscribe to streaming services, and buy merchandise?
Looking Ahead
The 2026 season will serve as a proving ground for this partnership’s thesis. MLB has built the infrastructure, empowered creators, engaged players, and created conversion pathways.
Now comes the hard part: execution at scale across 30 teams, 162 games, and multiple international markets.
Success metrics will likely include:
Growth in engagement on MLB’s global TikTok accounts
Conversion rates from TikTok traffic to ticket sales and streaming viewership
International audience expansion in target markets
Player adoption of TikTok as a personal branding platform
Creator content quality and authentic fan response
Year-over-year growth in younger demographic engagement with live games
But the ultimate measure of success isn’t what happens on TikTok, it’s what happens in stadiums, on streaming platforms, and in merchandise sales.
Can viral moments become loyal customers?
Can highlight reels create game attendees?
Can second-screen engagement drive first-screen consumption?
The hardest challenge in sports business has always been the same: making fans care enough to open their wallets.
TikTok gives MLB unprecedented access to younger, more diverse, and more global audiences than ever before. What they do with that access will determine whether this partnership is remembered as the moment baseball secured its future, or the moment the game discovered that viral moments and actual fandom aren’t the same thing.


