Social Media and Teens’ Mental Health: What Teens and Their Parents Say | Pew Research Center

Parents are more worried than teens about teen mental health. Both groups – especially parents – partly blame social media. But teens also see benefits.

Overview

Added

March 7, 2026

Audience

parent

Grade range

Grade 6–Grade 8

Page kind

Article

Introduction

Social Media and Teen Mental Health: Key Findings

  • Survey Context: Conducted by Pew Research Center (Sept. 18–Oct. 10, 2024) surveying 1,391 U.S. teens (ages 13–17) and their parents.
  • Parent vs. Teen Concern: Parents are significantly more concerned about teen mental health (55%) than teens themselves (35%).
  • Social Media Impact:
    • 48% of teens believe social media has a mostly negative effect on their peers (up from 32% in 2022).
    • Only 14% of teens believe social media negatively affects them personally.
    • 45% of teens report spending too much time on social media (up from 36% in 2022).
    • 74% of teens feel social media helps them connect with friends; 63% use it for creative expression.
  • Gender Disparities:
    • Teen girls report more negative impacts from social media than boys regarding mental health, confidence, and sleep.
    • Mothers and parents of teen girls express higher levels of concern regarding mental health than fathers or parents of boys.
  • Communication Gaps:
    • 80% of parents feel comfortable discussing mental health with their teens, while only 52% of teens feel comfortable having those conversations.
    • Teens are most comfortable talking about their mental health with parents (52%) and friends (48%), and least comfortable with teachers (12%).
  • Mental Health Resources:
    • 34% of teens use social media to find mental health information.
    • Among those who use social media for this purpose, 63% consider it an important resource.
  • Racial and Ethnic Differences:
    • Black parents and Black teens report higher levels of concern regarding teen mental health compared to their White and Hispanic counterparts.
    • Black teens are more comfortable discussing mental health with therapists and teachers than White or Hispanic teens.

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