Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Newsletters
Press
Donate
My Account
Contacted By Us?
Read our research on:
Gun Policy
|
International Conflict
|
Election 2024
Research Topics
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Age & Generations
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
Research Topics
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Age & Generations
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
Newsletters
Press
My Account
Contacted By Us?
DONATE
Read our research on:
Gun Policy
|
International Conflict
|
Election 2024
Home
Research Topics
Internet & Technology
User Demographics
Teens & Tech
Pew Research Center
August 3, 2022
Teens, Social Media and Technology 2022
Dispositions
←
Prev Page
Page
17
Page
18
Page
19
Page
20
Page
21
Page
22
Page
23
Page
24
Page
25
Page
26
Page
27
Next Page
→
Download
Dispositions
Embed
Post Infographics
Teens, Social Media and Technology 2022
Since 2014-15, TikTok has arisen; Facebook usage has dropped; Instagram, Snapchat have grown
About one-in-five teens visit or use YouTube ‘almost constantly’
54% of teens say it would be hard to give up social media
Nearly all teens in 2022 have access to a smartphone, up from 73% in 2014-15
Teens living in lower-income households are less likely to report having a computer, gaming console
Nearly half of teens now say they use the internet ‘almost constantly’
Black, Hispanic teens more likely than White teens to say they are online almost constantly
Majority of teens use YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat; share of teens who use Facebook dropped sharply from 2014-15 to now
Teen girls are more likely than boys to use TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat; teen boys more likely to use Twitch, Reddit and YouTube; and Black teens are especially drawn to TikTok compared with White and Hispanic teens
Roughly one-in-five teens are almost constantly on YouTube; only 2% say the same for Facebook
Black, Hispanic teens more likely than White teens to say they are almost constantly on TikTok, YouTube and Instagram
36% of teens say they spend too much time on social media; teen girls are more likely than boys to say this
Older teens are more likely than younger teens to say it would be hard to give up social media
Invitation and reminder dates
Weighting dimensions
The unweighted sample sizes and the error attributable to sampling
Cumulative response rate calculations
Since 2014-15, TikTok has arisen; Facebook usage has dropped; Instagram, Snapchat have grown
Black, Hispanic teens more likely than White teens to say they are online almost constantly
36% of teens say they spend too much time on social media; teen girls are more likely than boys to say this
Older teens are more likely than younger teens to say it would be hard to give up social media
54% of teens say it would be hard to give up social media
Nearly half of teens now say they use the internet ‘almost constantly’
Black, Hispanic teens more likely than White teens to say they are online almost constantly
Older teens are more likely than younger teens to say it would be hard to give up social media
Teen girls are more likely than boys to use TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat; teen boys more likely to use Twitch, Reddit and YouTube; and Black teens are especially drawn to TikTok compared with other groups
Older teens are more likely than younger teens to say it would be hard to give up social media
Copyright 2024 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Cookie Settings
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers