Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Social Media and News Fact Sheet

Digital sources have become an important part of Americans’ news diets – with social media playing a crucial role, particularly for younger adults. Overall, just over half of U.S. adults (54%) say they at least sometimes get news from social media, up slightly compared with the last few years.

Bar chart showing news consumption on social media

News consumption on social media

Facebook and YouTube outpace all other social media sites as places where Americans regularly get news. About a third of U.S. adults say they regularly get news on each of these two sites.

Smaller shares of Americans regularly get news on Instagram (20%), TikTok (17%) or X, formerly known as Twitter (12%). And even fewer get news on several other sites, including Reddit (8%), Nextdoor (5%), Snapchat (5%), WhatsApp (5%), LinkedIn (4%), Truth Social (3%) and Rumble (2%).

News consumption by social media site

% of U.S. adults who regularly get news on each social media site
Year
202036%
202131%
202231%
202330%
202433%
Year
202023%
202122%
202225%
202326%
202432%
Year
202011%
202111%
202213%
202316%
202420%
Year
20203%
20216%
202210%
202314%
202417%
Year
202015%
202113%
202214%
202312%
202412%
Year
20206%
20217%
20228%
20238%
20248%
Year
2020
2021
20224%
20235%
20245%
Year
20204%
20214%
20224%
20234%
20245%
Year
20203%
20213%
20223%
20233%
20245%
Year
20204%
20214%
20224%
20235%
20244%
Year
2020
2021
2022
2023
20243%
Year
2020
2021
2022
2023
20242%

Some social media sites – despite having relatively small overall audiences – stand out as destinations for news among many of their users. For example, 59% of X users get news there, as do a similar share of users on Truth Social (57%), the site owned by former President Donald Trump. On the other hand, only 14% of LinkedIn users regularly get news on that platform.

About half of TikTok users (52%) say they regularly get news on the site, up from 43% in 2023 and just 22% in 2020. The share of users who get news also has risen on several other sites, including YouTube and Instagram.

Social media sites by portion of users who regularly get news there

% of each social media site’s users who regularly get news there
Year
202054%
202147%
202244%
202343%
202448%
Year
202032%
202130%
202230%
202332%
202437%
Year
202028%
202127%
202229%
202334%
202440%
Year
202022%
202129%
202233%
202343%
202452%
Year
202059%
202155%
202253%
202353%
202459%
Year
202042%
202139%
202237%
202338%
202433%
Year
2020
2021
202223%
202328%
202427%
Year
202019%
202116%
202215%
202315%
202419%
Year
202013%
202114%
202210%
202312%
202416%
Year
202015%
202114%
202213%
202317%
202414%
Year
2020
2021
2022
2023
202457%
Year
2020
2021
2022
2023
202448%

Who consumes news on each social media site?

The people who regularly get news on different social media sites often differ by gender, age, political party and other factors. For example, women make up greater portions of regular news consumers on Nextdoor (64%), TikTok (62%), Facebook (60%), Snapchat (60%) and Instagram (59%), while men make up greater shares on Reddit (68%), X (64%), Rumble (60%), Truth Social (58%) and YouTube (57%).

News consumers on Snapchat, TikTok, Instagram, X and Reddit tend to be younger than those on other sites. Other patterns are unique to individual sites. For instance, 48% of news consumers on WhatsApp are Hispanic – much higher than on any other site. And LinkedIn has the largest portion of news consumers with a college degree (55%).

There also are partisan differences among those who regularly get news on some social media sites. Overwhelming shares of regular news consumers on Truth Social (88%) and Rumble (83%) are Republicans or Republican-leaning independents, as are half of those on Facebook and YouTube. On Instagram, WhatsApp, TikTok, Reddit and Nextdoor, news consumers are more likely to be Democrats or Democratic leaners. X news consumers are about evenly divided by party.

(Read the Appendix for data on the demographic and partisan makeup of U.S. adults who regularly get news from each social media site.)

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    This fact sheet was compiled by Research Assistant Christopher St. Aubin and Research Analyst Jacob Liedke.

    Read the methodology and the topline.

    Pew Research Center is a subsidiary of The Pew Charitable Trusts, its primary funder. This is the latest analysis in Pew Research Center’s ongoing investigation of the state of news, information and journalism in the digital age, a research program funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, with generous support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

    Follow these links for more in-depth analysis of news consumption on social media:

    Read all our reports and blog posts related to news platforms and sources.

    CORRECTION (Oct. 16, 2024): The topline for this survey previously included incorrect figures (refer to topline for details). These have been updated in the topline and do not affect the overall findings in this analysis. Nothing on this page has been changed.