India’s Expanding Social Media Market and Concerns Over Digital Addiction
India has become a vital growth market for social media companies, attracting significant attention from global players like Meta and Alphabet. These companies are now grappling with increasing pressure to limit young people’s access to their platforms, amid growing concerns over “digital addiction.”
Here are key facts about India’s internet and smartphone landscape, which are crucial to the strategies of companies like Meta and Alphabet’s YouTube.
User Base and Connectivity
By September 2025, India’s internet user base had surged to nearly 1.02 billion, a remarkable rise from approximately 250 million in 2014. The country is also the second-largest smartphone market globally, with 750 million devices in use.
India is home to 500 million unique social media users, according to research firm DataReportal. Although companies like Alphabet and Meta do not officially disclose country-specific figures, DataReportal estimates YouTube has 500 million users in India, Facebook has 403 million, Instagram boasts 481 million users, and Snapchat has 213 million. Additionally, Elon Musk’s X platform counts around 22 million users in the country.
Usage Intensity and Consumption Patterns
India has seen a massive rise in internet data usage. Average monthly data consumption per user has skyrocketed by 399 times, reaching roughly 24 gigabytes in 2025, up from just 62 megabytes in 2014. This makes India one of the highest data consumers globally, according to government figures.
This surge in consumption is facilitated by some of the lowest data costs worldwide, with an average price of only 10 cents per gigabyte. Social media platforms dominate daily usage, with Indians spending an average of 3.2 hours per day on social apps, based on a 2023 report from research firm Esya Centre.
Children and Smartphone Use
Approximately 24% of India’s population is under the age of 14, according to United Nations data. While specific statistics on children’s social media use remain scarce, a 2024 survey found that nearly 90% of children aged 14 to 16 have access to smartphones at home.
Recreational activities dominate screen time for children. According to the survey, 76% of children in this age group use social media, while just 57% use their devices for educational purposes in the week leading up to the survey.
With inputs from Reuters

