Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Newsletters Press Donate My Account Contacted By Us?
Pew Research Center Logo

Read our research on: Gun Policy | International Conflict | Election 2024

Pew Research Center Logo
Research Topics
All PublicationsMethodsShort ReadsTools & ResourcesExpertsAbout
Topics
Politics & PolicyInternational AffairsImmigration & MigrationRace & EthnicityReligionAge & GenerationsGender & LGBTQ
Family & RelationshipsEconomy & WorkScienceInternet & TechnologyNews Habits & MediaMethodological ResearchFull topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the PacificEurope & RussiaLatin AmericaMiddle East & North AfricaNorth AmericaSub-Saharan AfricaMultiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
FeaturesFact SheetsVideosData Essays
Research Topics
Topics
Politics & PolicyInternational AffairsImmigration & MigrationRace & EthnicityReligionAge & GenerationsGender & LGBTQFamily & RelationshipsEconomy & WorkScienceInternet & TechnologyNews Habits & MediaMethodological ResearchFull topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the PacificEurope & RussiaLatin AmericaMiddle East & North AfricaNorth AmericaSub-Saharan AfricaMultiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
FeaturesFact SheetsVideosData Essays
All PublicationsMethodsShort ReadsTools & ResourcesExpertsAboutNewslettersPressMy AccountContacted By Us?
DONATE

Read our research on: Gun Policy | International Conflict | Election 2024

Home Research Topics Internet & Technology Digital Divide
ReportJuly 20, 2016
Digital Divide Narrows for Latinos as More Spanish Speakers and Immigrants Go Online

Appendix B: Additional table

By Anna Brown, Gustavo López and Mark Hugo Lopez

Back to Overview
← Prev Page
Page1Page2Page3Page4Page5Page6Page7You are reading page8
Next Page →

Sign up for our Race & Ethnicity newsletter

New findings delivered monthly

Sign Up

Report Materials

Complete Report PDF Topline Questionnaire 2015 National Survey of Latinos Dataset

Table of Contents

Digital Divide Narrows for Latinos as More Spanish Speakers and Immigrants Go Online 1. Internet use among Hispanics 2. Broadband subscriptions among Latinos little changed since 2010 3. Hispanics and mobile access to the internet Acknowledgments Methodology Appendix A: References
Appendix B: Additional table

Related

short reads | Jul 16, 2021

Home broadband adoption, computer ownership vary by race, ethnicity in the U.S.

short reads | Jun 22, 2021

Digital divide persists even as Americans with lower incomes make gains in tech adoption

short reads | Jun 3, 2021

34% of lower-income home broadband users have had trouble paying for their service amid COVID-19

short reads | Apr 2, 2021

7% of Americans don’t use the internet. Who are they?

presentation | Nov 13, 2020

American life in the midst of crisis: How people are using technology as their lives are upended

Topics

Technology AdoptionDigital DivideMobileInternet Connectivity

MOST POPULAR

1
Changing Partisan Coalitions in a Politically Divided Nation
2
Majority in U.S. Say Israel Has Valid Reasons for Fighting; Fewer Say the Same About Hamas
3
9 facts about Americans and marijuana
4
About 1 in 4 U.S. teachers say their school went into a gun-related lockdown in the last school year
5
Americans rate their federal, state and local governments less positively than a few years ago

Pew Research Center
1615 L St. NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC 20036
USA

(+1) 202-419-4300 | Main
(+1) 202-857-8562 | Fax
(+1) 202-419-4372 | Media Inquiries

Research Topics
Politics & PolicyInternational AffairsImmigration & MigrationRace & EthnicityReligionAge & GenerationsGender & LGBTQ
Family & RelationshipsEconomy & WorkScienceInternet & TechnologyNews Habits & MediaMethodological ResearchFull topic list
Follow Us
Email Newsletters Instagram Twitter LinkedIn YouTube RSS

About Pew Research Center Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan fact tank that informs the public about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping the world. It conducts public opinion polling, demographic research, media content analysis and other empirical social science research. Pew Research Center does not take policy positions. It is a subsidiary of The Pew Charitable Trusts.

Copyright 2025 Pew Research Center About Terms & Conditions Privacy Policy Cookie Settings Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy Feedback Careers