Meta Ad Hooks: How to Write the First 3 Seconds That Stop the Scroll
The hook is the first 3 seconds of your Meta ad — video or static. It determines whether someone stops or scrolls. A weak hook wastes the rest of your creative spend. A strong hook can increase your 3-second video view rate from 15% to 40+%, cutting effective CPM in half for the same budget. Writing hooks is the highest-leverage creative skill in paid social.
Why Hooks Matter More Than Any Other Creative Element
Meta’s algorithm rewards engagement. An ad that gets watched earns cheaper future delivery — Meta distributes it more because users are responding. An ad that gets skipped becomes expensive to serve because Meta has to work harder to find receptive users. Hook rate (3-second views / impressions) directly impacts your effective CPM, which impacts your cost-per-purchase.
A brand with a 35% hook rate will typically see CPMs 20–40% lower than the same brand running identical targeting with a 15% hook rate. The algorithm essentially rewards you for not being annoying.
The 6 Hook Frameworks That Work for Ecommerce
1. The Bold Claim Hook
Open with a specific, provocative statement about your product’s outcome. Not vague — specific. “This serum reduced my hyperpigmentation by 70% in 4 weeks” outperforms “Amazing results in just weeks!” because it gives the brain something to evaluate. Specificity triggers the part of the brain that wants to verify or disprove the claim.
Formula: “[Specific outcome] in [specific timeframe]” or “I [did X] and got [specific result]”
2. The Question Hook
Ask a question your target audience actively thinks about. Not a rhetorical non-question like “Want better skin?” but a real question with a real answer gap: “Why does everyone in [context] use [product category] but almost no one knows [specific insight]?” The question creates an open loop — the brain cannot leave an unanswered question without at least a moment’s engagement.
Formula: “Why [thing most people do] [unexpected outcome]?” or “What actually happens when [specific scenario]?”
3. The Pattern Interrupt Hook
Start with something visually or contextually unexpected. Unusual angles, unexpected environments, surprising juxtapositions. A coffee brand showing their product underwater. A skincare brand showing someone applying serum at a race track. The visual disruption forces attention before the brain processes what it’s looking at. Works best for video; harder to execute in static.
4. The Social Proof Hook
Open with a customer result, not a brand claim. “I’ve tried everything for my back pain — this is the first thing that actually worked” is more credible than any brand-produced claim. UGC-style hooks where a real person speaks directly to camera achieve the highest stop rates in categories with skeptical audiences (supplements, skincare, health products).
Formula: Lead with the testimonial outcome, let the brand follow.
5. The Problem Agitation Hook
Name a specific frustration your audience has. Not a generic problem — a specific, recognisable scenario. “If you’ve ever ordered [X] and it arrived looking nothing like the photos…” The audience self-selects: people who’ve had that specific experience lean in; people who haven’t ignore it (which is fine — they’re not your target). Precise problem statements eliminate wasted impressions.
6. The Contrast Hook
Show before vs. after in the first frame. Product improvement, transformation, dramatic difference. Contrast is visually processed before cognition — the brain detects change automatically. Works in static as split-screen and in video as a quick cut between two states.
How to Test Hooks Without Wasting Budget
Run hook tests as a dedicated test campaign: keep the same audience, same budget, same video body — change only the first 3 seconds. Three to five hook variants per test. Evaluate on hook rate and ThruPlay rate (percentage watching 15+ seconds) at 3–5 days and €30–50 spend per variant. Promote the hook with the best combined score into your main campaign.
This isolates the variable correctly. Testing different hooks on different audiences or different budgets produces unattributable results. Control everything except the hook.
Static Ad Hooks: The First Visual Frame
Static ads don’t have 3 seconds of video — but the first visual frame is still your hook. What someone sees before they read any text determines whether they pause. For static: use a close-up of the product in use (not packshot on white), a before/after comparison, or a real human face (faces get more attention than objects). Pair with a headline that names the outcome in 5–7 words maximum.
Frequently Asked Questions
A hook is the first 3 seconds of a video ad or the primary visual and headline of a static ad. It determines whether someone stops scrolling. Hook rate (3-second views divided by impressions) measures hook effectiveness – above 30% is strong, below 20% signals the hook needs reworking.
Test 3-5 different hook variants per video, keeping everything else identical. The 6 frameworks that consistently work: bold specific claim, question with an open loop, pattern interrupt visual, social proof opening, problem agitation, and visual contrast. Evaluate on hook rate and ThruPlay rate after 3-5 days and $30-50 spend per variant.
Specificity beats vague claims. ‘Reduced my hyperpigmentation 70% in 4 weeks’ outperforms ‘Amazing skin in weeks.’ Name a real frustration your audience has, use an unexpected visual, or lead with a customer outcome rather than a brand claim. The hook must answer ‘why should I stop?’ in under 3 seconds.
3 seconds is the measurement window, but the hook should complete its opening statement or question by second 3-5. For a 30-second video, the first 5 seconds is the hook zone. For static ads, the hook is the visual and headline combination visible before any scroll.
Yes. Meta’s algorithm rewards high-engagement ads with cheaper delivery because they signal positive user experience. A brand improving hook rate from 15% to 35% typically sees effective CPMs decrease 20-40% over 2-4 weeks as the algorithm learns to prioritise the more engaging creative.