Here’s what you should know about smartphone usage in 2015

Nearly one in five Americans now rely on their smartphones for Internet access.

Nineteen percent of Americans rely on their smartphone for Internet access — either because they lack broadband access at home or because they have few other options for online access, according to a new Pew Research Center report.

Seven percent of Americans who own a smartphone have neither traditional broadband access at home nor available alternatives for Internet access other than their cell phone.

These so called “smartphone-dependent” users make up a unique demographic of Americans: younger adults, those with lower incomes and those who are less educated. African-Americans and Latinos fall into this “smartphone-dependent” group more than whites.


In particular:

• 15 percent of Americans aged 18-19 are heavily dependent on a smartphone for online access.

• 13 percent of Americans with an annual household income of less than $30,000 are smartphone-dependent. Only one percent of Americans from households earning more than $75,000 annually rely on their smartphones in such a way.

• 12 percent of African Americans and 13 percent of Latinos are smartphone-dependent, compared to four percent of whites.

Overall nearly two-thirds of Americans (64 percent) own a smartphone — up from 35 percent in spring 2011. Fifty-four percent of smartphone owners say their phone is “not always needed” compared to 46 percent who say it is something they “couldn’t live without.”

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