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Only One Social Media Platform Is Used by 95% of Teens (And It's Not TikTok)

While TikTok occupies the time of 67% of teens surveyed for a recent Pew Research Center study, it's another video site that truly attracts the views. (Sorry, Facebook.)

If you watch any show featuring teenagers that's set in present day, you’ve probably seen some variation on the joke that comes up when Facebook is mentioned. The kids either say, “No one uses Facebook anymore,” or even, “What’s Facebook?”

Is that an exaggeration? Perhaps, but not by much. The Pew Research Center conducts regular updates of tech-usage surveys, and from April to May 2022, it asked 13- to 17-year-olds in the US about their favorite social media platforms. The results (above) are telling, and the clear loser is Facebook. Seven years ago, it was used by 71% of teens, but that number has now dropped to 32%. Twitter and Tumblr usage is also down, but each had a less egregious drop.

TikTok didn’t exist until 2018, but it's now even more popular than Instagram and Snapchat with teens. Both of the latter services saw growth, especially Snapchat, which grew from 41% to 59%.

Of course, no platform comes close to YouTube. It's used by 95% of the surveyed teens. Pew also asked how often the kids are using the sites, ranging from “ever” to “constantly.” YouTube is again at the top, for constant use (19%), and TikTok is number two, at 16%.

CONTANT USE

Do kids use social media too much? Only 36% of the teens in this survey think so. Fifty-five percent said they use just the right amount, and 8% said they don’t use it enough!

Could they give it up? Fifty-four percent of survey respondents said it would be somewhat to very hard to do so; 46% said it would be somewhat to very easy. That’s slightly more addiction than ambivalence.

By the way, if you think Facebook is too big to fail even beyond the confines of teenage usage, keep in mind that two social networks that were on the previous survey (Google+ and Vine) aren't around anymore. Just ask about that on Friendster or MySpace.

For more, including some new information on teen access to smartphones and kids' overall internet use, read the full report at Pew Research.

About Eric Griffith