Facebook has lost its number one spot as the most popular social media platform among American teens. According to a recent study, the percentage of US teens who use Facebook has dropped from 71% to 51%. Only 45% of American teens claim to use the social media platform regularly. Facebook’s own Instagram sees 72% US teens using the platform while Snapchat sits close at 69%. Google’s YouTube is the most used social platform among teens with 85% American teens claiming they use the video sharing platform. However, YouTube is not a traditional social media website like Snapchat and Instagram.
All is not doom and gloom for Facebook, with the social media platform experiencing a rise in users from lower-income households. Households that make less than $30,000 per year are more likely to have teens in the family use Facebook than ones that make over $75,000. Over 70% teens from lower income households use the social media platform while only 36% teens from high-income households claim to use Facebook. Surprisingly, Instagram is a platform that is unaffected by household income with the userbase well split across multiple income groups.
Twitter is trailing well behind in the social media world with only 32% teens using the platform. Twitter continues to be an adult-dominated platform, unlike most other social media platforms that attract the younger demographic. According to the report, Snapchat is the most frequently used social media platform with 35% teens claiming they use the app very frequently.
The research also tried to identify how American teens feel about social media. 45% of the teens claimed that they are indifferent to them while 31% feel social media is positive. 24% of the participants claimed social media is mostly negative citing bullying and rumor mongering as the major reasons that make them feel negative about platforms like Snapchat, Facebook, and Instagram.