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Alarming Average Screen Time Statistics (2024)

by Josh Howarth
June 24, 2024

Screen time has become part of the fabric of everyday life for most.

And many do not realize just how much time they are dedicating to phone screens, computer screens, and TV screens.

With that in mind, we’ll explore the latest screen time data to reveal insights focused on these areas:

Average Screen Time Stats 2024

  • Globally, people average 6 hours and 40 minutes of screen time per day
  • Daily screen time has increased by over 30 minutes per day since 2013
  • The average American spends 7 hours and 3 minutes looking at a screen each day
  • South Africans spend 9 hours and 24 minutes on screen per day
  • Almost half (49%) of 0 to 2-year-olds interact with smartphones
  • Gen Z averages around 9 hours of screen time per day

Average Screen Time Overview

According to the latest available data, the average person spends 6 hours and 40 minutes per day on screens connected to the internet.

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That figure equates to approximately 5 billion days when extrapolated across all global internet users.

Overall, daily screen time is up 8.4% (31 minutes) since 2013.

Here’s a breakdown of the average internet-connected screen time since 2013:

Year Average Screen Time Change Over Previous Year
Q3 2013 6 hours 9 minutes -
Q3 2014 6 hours 23 minutes ↑ 3.8%
Q3 2015 6 hours 20 minutes ↓ 0.8%
Q3 2016 6 hours 29 minutes ↑ 2.4%
Q3 2017 6 hours 46 minutes ↑ 4.4%
Q3 2018 6 hours 48 minutes ↑ 0.5%
Q3 2019 6 hours 38 minutes ↓ 2.5%
Q3 2020 6 hours 54 minutes ↑ 4%
Q3 2021 6 hours 58 minutes ↑ 1%
Q3 2022 6 hours 37 minutes ↓ 5.2%
Q3 2023 6 hours 40 minutes ↑ 0.8%

The latest figures suggest the average person spends upwards of 40% of their waking hours on an internet-connected screen.

Source: Data Reportal, Data Reportal, DigitalInformationWorld

US Average Screen Time

The average screen time in the United States is 7 hours 3 minutes per day – 7 minutes more than the global average according to Comparitech data.

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The split between mobile and computer screen time is almost equal in the US. On average, 3 hours and 30 minutes are dedicated to mobile devices, while 3 hours and 34 minutes are spent on computers.

Here’s a comparison between the US and global screen time allocation:

Country Proportion Streaming TV Proportion Playing Video Games Daily Time Spent on Video Games Daily Time Spent on Social Media
US

91.6%

80.9%

1 hour 27 mins 2 hours 14 mins
Global Average

93.5%

83.6%

1 hour 12 mins 2 hours 27 mins

Somewhat surprisingly, the US is behind the world average in terms of the proportion of the population streaming TV (-1.9%) and the proportion of the population playing video games (-2.7%).

Daily time spent on video games is 15 minutes above average. But time spent on social media is 13 minutes lower than the global average.

Age clearly plays a significant role in screen time consumption as US teenagers spend over 3 hours per day watching TV or videos.

Here’s the full breakdown of how the average US teen distributes their daily screen time:

Activity Average Daily Screen Time
Watching TV/Videos 3 hours 16 mins
Gaming 1 hour 46 mins
Social Media 1 hour 27 mins
Browsing Websites 51 mins
Other 29 mins
Video Chatting 20 mins
E-reading 15 mins
Content Creation 14 mins

And looking at this demographic in closer detail, income also plays a notable role in screen time consumption.

American teenagers from lower-income households (<$35,000 annual household income) spend 9 hours and 19 minutes on their screens each day.

That’s 2 hours and 3 minutes more than the 7 hours and 16 minutes averaged by teenagers from higher-income households ($100,000+ annual household income).

Sources: Comparitech, Common Sense Media

Screen Time Changes Over Time

From phones to tablets and smartwatches to TVs, screens are everywhere.

The vast majority are connected to the internet nowadays. And the average time spent using the internet via our screens is on the rise.

However, the rate of time increase isn’t the same across the board. And some countries have even seen a drop-off between 2023 and 2024.

Here’s the rate of change between average screen time in 2023 and 2024 for select countries:

Country Change in Screen Time
UAE ↑ 42 minutes
Russia ↑ 24 minutes
Australia ↑ 23 minutes
India ↑ 22 minutes
New Zealand ↑ 17 minutes
UK ↑ 15 minutes
Ireland ↑ 14 minutes
Egypt ↑ 14 minutes
Israel ↑ 12 minutes
Malaysia ↑ 11 minutes
Japan ↑ 11 minutes
Germany ↑ 10 minutes
Denmark ↑ 10 minutes
Austria ↑ 9 minutes
China ↑ 8 minutes
Sweden ↑ 5 minutes
US ↑ 4 minutes
Global ↑ 3 minutes
Netherlands ↑ 3 minutes
Czechia ↑ 1 minute
Taiwan ↓ 1 minute
South Korea ↓ 2 minutes
Spain ↓ 3 minutes
Indonesia ↓ 4 minutes
France ↓ 4 minutes
Chile ↓ 5 minutes
Vietnam ↓ 5 minutes
Belgium ↓ 5 minutes
Switzerland ↓ 6 minutes
Italy ↓ 6 minutes
Portugal ↓ 7 minutes
Hong Kong ↓  7 minutes
Thailand ↓ 8 minutes
Singapore ↓ 10 minutes
Saudi Arabia ↓ 11 minutes
Greece ↓ 12 minutes
South Africa ↓ 14 minutes
Canada ↓ 17 minutes
Colombia ↓ 18 minutes
Brazil ↓ 19 minutes
Argentina ↓ 20 minutes
Philippines ↓ 22 minutes
Poland ↓ 25 minutes
Turkey ↓ 27 minutes
Mexico ↓ 30 minutes
Romania ↓ 32 minutes

Source: Comparitech

Average Screen Time By Region

Screen time varies significantly by region. According to recent records from 43 nations, South Africa tops the charts for average screen time consumption per day.

south-africa-screen-time-min.webp

The Philippines, Brazil, and Colombia each average 10+ hours per day too.

Here’s a closer look at 20 of the most active screen time users:

Country

Total Screen Time

Mobile Screen Time

Computer Screen Time

South Africa

9 hours 24 mins

5 hours 15 mins

4 hours 9 mins

Brazil

9 hours 13 mins

5 hours 19 mins

3 hours 54 mins

Philippines

8 hours 52 mins

5 hours 20 mins

3 hours 32 mins

Colombia

8 hours 43 mins

4 hours 47 mins

3 hours 56 mins

Argentina

8 hours 41 mins

4 hours 37 mins

4 hours 5 mins

Chile

8 hours 31 mins

4 hours 48 mins

3 hours 42 mins

Russia

8 hours 21 mins

3 hours 51 mins

4 hours 24 mins

Malaysia

8 hours 17 mins

4 hours 37 mins

3 hours 40 mins

UAE

8 hours 11 mins

4 hours 34 mins

3 hours 38 mins

Egypt

7 hours 55 mins

4 hours 25 mins

3 hours 30 mins

Global Average

6 hours 40 mins

3 hours 50 mins

2 hours 50 mins

On average, people spend 42% of their waking hours looking at a screen.

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Yet, in South Africa, this figure is closer to 60%.

While, in Japan, this proportion is far lower at just 25%.

Globally, social media screen time and game console screen time are on the rise. But more traditional television (which includes streaming) viewing time is declining.

Below are figures for the global average screen time allocation per day:

Screen Time Allocation Q3 2022 Q3 2023 2022-2023 Change
Using Internet 6 hours 37 mins 6 hours 40 mins ↑ 0.8% (3 mins)
Watching TV (inc. streaming) 3 hours 23 mins 3 hours 6 mins ↓ 8.2% (17 mins)
Using Social Media 2 hours 31 mins 2 hours 23 mins ↓ 5.5% (8 mins)
Using a Games Console 1 hour 14 mins 1 hour 2 mins ↓ 16.7% (12 mins)

And here’s how the countries above compare in terms of each screen time allocation:

Country Daily Time Spent on Video Games Daily Time Spent on Social Media

South Africa

1 hour 43 mins 52 mins

Brazil

3 hour 46 mins 1 hour 17 mins

Philippines

2 hour 16 mins 30 mins

Colombia

1 hour 53 mins 28 mins

Argentina

3 hours 15 mins 1 hour 1 min

Chile

1 hour 59 mins 1 hour 12 mins

Russia

1 hour 11 mins 32 mins

Malaysia

2 hours 15 mins 1 hour 2 mins

UAE

2 hours 58 mins 1 hour 17 mins

Egypt

1 hour 41 mins 51 mins
Global Average 2 hour 23 mins 1 hour 2 mins

Around 4 in 5 Chinese citizens play video games – 6.2% under the global average.

chinese-playing-video-games-min.webp

And an average of 1 hour 15 minutes is spent on game consoles – just 3 minutes above the world mean.

Nonetheless, the Chinese government is aiming to crack down on children’s screen time by limiting their play time to three hours per week. That equates to just under 26 minutes per day.

From the available data, Japan and Russia average the closest play time to that figure (30 minutes). And only Israel averages less (19 minutes).

Sources: Comparitech, DataReportal, Reuters

Screen Time by Age

Age is an important factor in screen time consumption. Around 3 in 4 (74%) of parents with a child aged 2 or younger claim their child watches TV.

children-watching-tv-min.webp

And 90% of older children spend time watching a TV screen.

Here’s a breakdown of the proportion of children who use certain devices according to the latest research:

Age TV Tablet Smartphone Desktop/Laptop Gaming
0-2 years 74% 35% 49% 12% 9%
3-4 years 90% 64% 62% 21% 25%
5-8 years 93% 81% 59% 54% 58%
9-11 years 91% 78% 67% 73% 68%
Total 88% 67% 60% 44% 44%

Almost across the board, there is a strong positive correlation between age and the proportion of children using a device.

Interestingly, the most passive screen time experience (watching TV) plateaued from the ages of 3-4 years onwards.

Whereas more active, and potentially demanding devices (desktop computers/laptops and gaming consoles) increased at a steady rate with age.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, young people spend more time in front of screens than average. In fact, a recent study revealed that Gen Z spends around 9 hours per day looking at a screen – approximately 2 hours more than the US and global average.

Sources: PewResearch, Forbes

Impact of Screen Time

Data from a survey of 2,000+ US adults revealed that less than half the time spent on screens is believed to be productive.

Furthermore, 41% admit to finding screen time management challenging.

screen-time-managment-min.webp

And a concerning 21% feel guilty about how much time their children spend on screens.

Excessive screen time can have very real knock-on effects - especially in children.

Elementary-level school children who watch 2+ hours of screen time per day are more likely to suffer from social, emotional, and attentional issues.

On a more positive note, tens of studies have indicated that there is no significant correlation between screen time and academic performance.

However, a whole host of damaging side effects are linked with too much screen time, including:

  • Sleep deprivation - Blue light interferes with melatonin production and disrupts the body’s circadian rhythm.
  • Obesity - Data shows a strong association between screen time and obesity in children aged 5 to 17, most likely due to the sedentary nature of viewing a screen.
  • Susceptibility to Type 2 Diabetes - In the UK, children aged between 9 and 10 who spend 3+ hours on the screen each day were more likely to show resistance to insulin
  • Delayed learning - Young children who watch excessive amounts of TV can experience difficulties picking up the language.

In the wider population, limiting social media use to a maximum of 30 minutes each day has been linked with reduced depression and improved well-being.

Sources: People, AIFS, Mayo Clinical Health System, The Journalist’s Resource, Active Health, Quartz

Conclusion

Screens are inextricably linked with modern life. And the ways in which people spend their screen time are always evolving.

Whether the number of time people spend on screens increases, or sees a sudden reversal, remains to be seen.

If you enjoyed these stats, check out some of our other related content: Startling Social Media Addiction Statistics, Trending Social Media Startups, and Worldwide Daily Social Media Usage.