How are 8 to 14-year-olds spending time online? Ofcom data offers some insightpublished at 11:38 BST
Children in the UK aged eight to 14 are online for an average of nearly three hours each day, at least two hours of which are spent using types of social media, survey data suggests.
Media regulator Ofcom has been drilling down on the figures, external and has found that YouTube accounts for the largest share of time spent online by young people in the eight to 14 age group, at 23%.
Snapchat is responsible for 18% of time online, with WhatsApp on 9%, TikTok accounting for 7%, Roblox also for 7% and other platforms accounting for 36%.
The use of these services varies according to age, Ofcom found. It says it is ready to work with the government to help “"build on this progress with new measures to protect children".
In its survey, Ofcom found that the youngest age group, eight to nine-year-olds, are likely to spend an average of 53 minutes each day using YouTube (45% of time online) and 10 to 12-year-olds spend 55 minutes (31%), but among 13 to 14-year-olds the average drops to 31 minutes (13%).
The opposite pattern is true for Snapchat, which accounts for six minutes of time online spent by eight to nine-year-olds (5% of the total), rising to 36 minutes for 10 to 12-year-olds (20%) and one hour and 37 minutes for 13 to 14-year-olds (40%).
And use of TikTok increases gradually, from an average of six minutes a day among eight to nine-year-olds (5% of time online) to 17 minutes for 10 to 12-year-olds (9%) and 21 minutes for 13 to 14-year-olds (9%).









