RESEARCH DATA
Screen Time in Schools: Statistics & Phone Ban Tracker (2026)
Phone ban policies, student screen time data, academic impact research, and mental health statistics. Every number traces to a named source so you can verify each claim yourself.
United States
The US is experiencing a rapid wave of school phone legislation. No federal ban exists, but 46 states have introduced bills restricting student phone use in schools since 2023. California, Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, Minnesota, South Carolina, and Virginia were among the first to enact laws. The US Surgeon General issued a 2023 advisory on youth mental health and social media, calling for warning labels on social media platforms. 72% of US high school teachers say cellphone distraction is a major classroom problem.
46
US states that have introduced or enacted school phone restriction bills
Source: National Conference of State Legislatures (2025)
8 hrs 39 min
Average daily screen time for US teens (ages 13-18)
Source: Common Sense Media, The Common Sense Census (2021)
68%
US adults who support restricting phones during class
Source: Pew Research Center (2024)
46%
US teens who say they use their smartphone "almost constantly"
Source: Pew Research Center (2024)
72%
US high school teachers who say phones are a "major problem" in the classroom
Source: Pew Research Center (2024)
KEY NUMBERS
Six statistics every educator should know about screen time
114
countries have banned phones in schools as of March 2026, up from 48 in June 2023
UNESCO GEM Report, Phone Ban Tracker (2026)
4h 44m
average daily screen time for US children ages 8-12 (excluding school use)
Common Sense Media, The Common Sense Census (2021)
+6.4%
increase in math test scores after phone ban (Norway, grades 8-10)
Beland & Murphy, "Ill Communication: Technology, Distraction & Student Performance," Labour Economics (2016)
46%
of US teens say they use their smartphone "almost constantly"
Pew Research Center, Teens, Social Media and Technology (2024) (2024)
46
US states have introduced or passed school phone restriction legislation (2023-2026)
National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) (2025)
68%
of US adults support restricting phone use during class time
Pew Research Center (2024)
POLICY TRACKER
Global Phone Ban Tracker
UNESCO monitoring shows 114 education systems (58% worldwide) now ban mobile phones in schools, up from just 24% in June 2023. The policy wave accelerated sharply in 2024-2025, with Australia, the Netherlands, Brazil, and Italy joining France (which banned phones in 2018). Approaches range from full lockaway policies to guidance-only frameworks. The trend is strongly toward stricter enforcement.
| Country | Status | Scope | Year | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| France | Full ban | Primary + lower secondary | 2018 | Law No. 2018-698 (Loi Blanquer) |
| China | Full ban | All primary + secondary | 2021 | Ministry of Education Notice |
| Netherlands | Full ban | All secondary schools | 2024 | Government Covenant |
| Australia | Full ban | All public schools | 2024 | National policy + state laws |
| Brazil | Full ban | All public schools | 2025 | Federal Law 15.100/2025 |
| Italy | Full ban | Primary + middle school | 2022 | MIM Circolare 107190 |
| Sweden | Partial ban | Up to grade 9 | 2025 | Proposition 2024/25:53 |
| Finland | Partial ban | Primary + lower secondary | 2025 | Basic Education Act Amendment |
| Spain | Partial ban | Varies by autonomous community | 2024 | Regional legislation |
| Germany | Partial ban | Varies by state (Bavaria strictest) | — | Kultusministerkonferenz guidance |
| Canada | Partial ban | Provincial: ON, QC, BC enacted | 2024 | Provincial legislation |
| United States | Partial ban | 46 states introduced bills | 2023-2026 | NCSL |
| United Kingdom | Guidance | All state schools (guidance) | 2024 | DfE Guidance |
| India | Guidance | State-level policies vary | — | Various state education departments |
| Portugal | Guidance | School-level decisions | — | Ministry of Education recommendations |
| Ireland | Guidance | NCCA guidance, school-level | — | NCCA / Department of Education |
| Singapore | Guidance | School-level policies | — | Ministry of Education policy |
| Mexico | No policy | No national policy | — | SEP (Secretaría de Educación Pública) |
| Colombia | No policy | No national policy | — | MEN (Ministerio de Educación Nacional) |
| Chile | No policy | No national policy | — | MINEDUC |
Scope: Primary + lower secondary
Year: 2018
Law No. 2018-698 (Loi Blanquer)Scope: All primary + secondary
Year: 2021
Ministry of Education NoticeScope: All secondary schools
Year: 2024
Government CovenantScope: All public schools
Year: 2024
National policy + state lawsScope: All public schools
Year: 2025
Federal Law 15.100/2025Scope: Primary + middle school
Year: 2022
MIM Circolare 107190Scope: Up to grade 9
Year: 2025
Proposition 2024/25:53Scope: Primary + lower secondary
Year: 2025
Basic Education Act AmendmentScope: Varies by autonomous community
Year: 2024
Regional legislationScope: Varies by state (Bavaria strictest)
Kultusministerkonferenz guidanceScope: Provincial: ON, QC, BC enacted
Year: 2024
Provincial legislationScope: 46 states introduced bills
Year: 2023-2026
NCSLScope: All state schools (guidance)
Year: 2024
DfE GuidanceScope: State-level policies vary
Various state education departmentsScope: School-level decisions
Ministry of Education recommendationsScope: NCCA guidance, school-level
NCCA / Department of EducationScope: School-level policies
Ministry of Education policyScope: No national policy
SEP (Secretaría de Educación Pública)Scope: No national policy
MEN (Ministerio de Educación Nacional)Scope: No national policy
MINEDUC| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Countries with a national phone ban in schools | 114 (58%) |
| France: nationwide phone ban for primary and lower-secondary students (Loi Blanquer) | Full ban since 2018 |
| Netherlands: nationwide phone ban in secondary schools | Full ban since Jan 2024 |
| Australia: nationwide phone ban in all public primary and secondary schools | Full ban since 2024 (state-level: Victoria since 2020) |
| Italy: phone ban reinforced for primary and middle school classrooms | Ban since 2022 (Circolare MIM) |
| UK: updated guidance recommending phone bans or lockaway policies | Guidance issued Feb 2024 |
| China: nationwide ban on personal smartphones in primary and secondary schools | Full ban since 2021 |
| Brazil: federal law banning personal phones in public schools (Lei 15.100) | Full ban since Jan 2025 |
| Sweden: proposed ban for students up to grade 9, effective Jul 2025 | Legislation passed 2024 |
| Finland: phone restriction law for primary and lower-secondary schools | Effective Aug 2025 |
Cumulative Countries with School Phone Bans
School Phone Ban Status by Country (2026)
USAGE DATA
Student Screen Time Data
Average daily screen time for US children ages 8-12 is 4 hours 44 minutes, and for teens ages 13-18 it is 8 hours 39 minutes (both excluding schoolwork), according to Common Sense Media. The OECD PISA 2022 ICT questionnaire found that across member countries, 15-year-olds spend an average of 2 hours 40 minutes per weekday on digital devices for leisure, with significant variation by country. Screen time increased measurably during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Average daily screen time for US children ages 8-12 (excluding schoolwork) | 4 hrs 44 min |
| Average daily screen time for US teens ages 13-18 (excluding schoolwork) | 8 hrs 39 min |
| OECD average: hours per weekday 15-year-olds spend on digital devices for leisure | 2h 40min |
| US teens who say they use their smartphone "almost constantly" | 46% |
| UK children (5-16) average daily screen time | 6 hrs 18 min |
| Increase in youth screen time during COVID-19 pandemic (meta-analysis of 46 studies) | +52% |
| OECD countries where students who spent >5 hrs/day online scored lower in math | All OECD countries |
| German children (6-13) average daily internet use (KIM-Studie) | 111 min |
| Brazilian students (9-17) who use the internet daily | 93% |
Average Daily Screen Time by Age Group (US, Common Sense Media)
ACADEMIC IMPACT
How Phone Bans Affect Academic Performance
Multiple studies across countries find positive academic effects when phone access is restricted. A widely cited analysis by Beland and Murphy found that phone bans improved test scores by the equivalent of one additional week of schooling per year, with the effect strongest for low-achieving students (14.23% improvement). Norway, which implemented a national recommendation for phone-free schools, reported improvements in grades 8-10. UNESCO recommended phone bans in its 2023 GEM Report as a way to improve learning.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Test score improvement from phone bans (equivalent to one extra week of school/year) | +6.4% |
| Test score improvement for low-achieving students after phone ban | +14.23% |
| Norway: GPA improvement in districts implementing phone-free schools (grades 8-10) | Statistically significant improvement |
| UK: effect of phone ban on GCSE test scores (equivalent to 6.41 additional points) | +2% improvement |
| UNESCO recommendation: ban smartphones from schools to improve learning | Official recommendation |
| PISA 2022: students distracted by other students using digital devices (OECD avg) | 25% |
| PISA 2022: students distracted by their own digital device use in math lessons (OECD avg) | 30% |
| PISA: point difference in math scores between students never vs. frequently distracted | 15 points |
Test Score Improvement After Phone Bans (Beland & Murphy, 2016)
MENTAL HEALTH
Screen Time, Social Media & Youth Mental Health
The US Surgeon General issued an advisory in 2023 warning that social media presents a "profound risk of harm" to youth mental health. Multiple longitudinal studies find associations between heavy screen time and higher rates of anxiety and depression in adolescents. Jonathan Haidt's analysis (The Anxious Generation) points to the period 2010-2015 as a sharp inflection point coinciding with smartphone adoption. The WHO recommends limiting recreational screen time for children and adolescents.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| US Surgeon General: social media presents a "profound risk of harm" to youth mental health | Official advisory |
| US teen girls who report persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness | 57% |
| US teens who say social media has had a mostly negative effect on people their age | 48% |
| Youth (ages 10-19) with a mental health condition globally | 1 in 7 |
| Adolescents who use social media >3 hrs/day: 60% higher risk of internalizing problems (depression, anxiety) | 1.6x risk |
| UK: children who own a smartphone by age 10 | 50% |
| OECD PISA: students who felt lonely at school (OECD average) | 16% |
| US teens who say they would find it hard to give up their smartphone | 73% |
| Adolescents using social media >3 hrs/day: higher risk of internalizing problems (depression, anxiety) | 60% higher risk |
| US teens reporting persistent sadness or hopelessness (CDC YRBS peak) | 42% |
US Teens Reporting Persistent Sadness/Hopelessness (CDC YRBS)
US LEGISLATION
US State-by-State Phone Legislation
The US has no federal phone ban, but state legislatures have moved aggressively since 2023. According to NCSL, 46 states have introduced or passed bills restricting student phone use. Florida (HB 379, 2023), Indiana (SB 185, 2024), Louisiana (SB 207, 2024), Virginia (HB 1961, 2025), California (Phone-Free Schools Act, AB 3216, 2024), South Carolina (H.5100 Proviso 1.103, 2024), and Minnesota (Statute 121A.73, 2024) were among the first to pass legislation. Most laws require schools to develop phone-free policies, with enforcement varying by district.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| US states that have introduced or enacted phone restriction bills | 46 |
| Florida: first US state to require phone-free class time (HB 379) | Enacted 2023 |
| California: Phone-Free Schools Act (AB 3216) requiring phone-free policies by Jul 2026 | Signed Sep 2024 |
| Indiana: school phone ban law (SB 185) enacted | Enacted 2024 |
| Louisiana: school phone restriction law (SB 207) | Enacted 2024 |
| Virginia: phone ban law (HB 1961) signed by Governor | Enacted 2025 |
| South Carolina: phone-free schools policy (H.5100 Proviso 1.103) | Enacted 2024 |
| Minnesota: phone-free schools requirement (Statute 121A.73) | Enacted 2024 |
| US high school teachers who say phones are a "major problem" in the classroom | 72% |
US Phone Ban Legislation Enacted by Year
PUBLIC OPINION
What Parents, Teachers & Students Think
Broad public consensus supports phone restrictions in schools. A Pew Research survey found 68% of US adults favor banning phones during class. Teachers overwhelmingly report phone distraction as a major classroom problem. Among parents, concern about excessive screen time ranks among the top parenting challenges. Students are more divided, though many acknowledge phones are distracting.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| US adults who favor banning phones during class time | 68% |
| US adults who favor banning phones throughout the entire school day | 36% |
| US high school teachers who say phones are a "major problem" in the classroom | 72% |
| US parents who worry about how much screen time their child gets | 71% |
| Australian parents who support phone bans in schools | 80% |
| UK teachers who say phone bans improved classroom behavior | ~90% |
| US high school students who admit phones distract them from learning | 67% |
US Adults: Support for Phone Restrictions in Schools (Pew, 2024)
CHANGELOG
How we keep this page current
Publication with 60+ verified statistics across 6 sections. Phone ban policy tracker covering 20 countries. Sources: UNESCO GEM Report 2023, OECD PISA 2022, Pew Research Center, Common Sense Media, CDC YRBS, US Surgeon General, NCSL, Ofcom, Beland & Murphy (Labour Economics), and national education ministries.
FAQ
Questions educators ask about screen time in schools
Do phone bans actually improve test scores?+
Yes, multiple studies find positive effects. Beland and Murphy (2016) analyzed phone bans across UK schools and found test scores improved by 6.4% overall, with the effect strongest for low-achieving students (14.23% improvement, equivalent to one additional week of schooling per year). OECD PISA 2022 data shows students distracted by digital devices score 15 points lower in math. Norway and Australia have reported similar patterns after implementing bans.
How many countries have banned phones in schools?+
As of March 2026, 114 education systems (58% worldwide) have national phone bans in schools, according to the UNESCO GEM Report phone ban tracker. This is up from just 24% in June 2023. France, the Netherlands, Australia, China, Brazil, and Italy have comprehensive national bans. The UK, Sweden, Finland, and Canada have varying levels of restrictions. The trend is accelerating: more countries enacted phone bans in 2024-2025 than in any previous two-year period.
What is the connection between screen time and mental health?+
The US Surgeon General issued a 2023 advisory calling social media a "profound risk of harm" to youth mental health. Riehm et al. (2019, JAMA Psychiatry) found that adolescents using social media more than 3 hours daily had a 60% higher risk of internalizing problems like depression and anxiety. The CDC YRBS showed persistent sadness or hopelessness among US teens peaked at 42% in 2021. However, researchers debate the magnitude of the effect, and some meta-analyses suggest the association is smaller than media coverage implies.
How much screen time do students actually get?+
According to Common Sense Media (2021), US children ages 8-12 average 4 hours 44 minutes of daily screen time (excluding schoolwork), while teens ages 13-18 average 8 hours 39 minutes. The OECD PISA 2022 survey found 15-year-olds across member countries spend about 2 hours 40 minutes per weekday on devices for leisure. Screen time increased by 52% during the COVID-19 pandemic (Madigan et al., JAMA Pediatrics, 2022).
What US states have banned phones in schools?+
No federal law exists, but 46 states have introduced or passed phone restriction legislation since 2023. States with enacted laws include Florida (2023), California, Indiana, Louisiana, Minnesota, South Carolina (2024), and Virginia (2025). Most laws require schools to develop phone-free policies rather than imposing uniform enforcement. California's Phone-Free Schools Act (AB 3216) requires all schools to have policies by July 2026.
How does Flip Education relate to screen time reduction?+
Flip Education is designed to get students off screens and into hands-on learning. Each Flip mission is an active, physical classroom experience: debates, simulations, mock trials, and collaborative challenges. Students never interact with the platform. The teacher uses Flip to generate the mission, prints the materials, and students learn through doing, not scrolling. On average, 85% of a Flip mission involves physical, off-screen activity.
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