The report – published last week – is the first publicly-available analysis of its kind for the UK, produced by research and communications agency We are Flint.
The findings reveal that 84% of all UK adults use social media, and two-thirds of UK adults use social media every day.
Key social media usage findings by platform
YouTube and Facebook are by far the most popular platforms among UK adults online (respectively 85% and 78%).
Although Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram and Snapchat are often mentioned in mainstream or trade media, their use remains relatively ‘contained’ among UK adults online (respectively 45%, 30%, 29%, 20%). Periscope remains niche at 6%.
Google+ shows resilience, coming in third (50%), while WhatsApp seals its recent growth by coming in fourth (48%).
The ‘stickiest’ platforms are Facebook (59% of UK adults online use it daily), WhatsApp (28%) and YouTube (27%).
Key findings by demographic
Reports abound about young people moving away from Facebook, but in absolute terms it remains the second most popular platform among 18 to 29-year-olds (92%), behind YouTube (96%).
While there is an indistinguishable difference between men and women in terms of overall usage, women are six points more likely to use social media on a daily basis (76% versus 70%). The biggest difference in platform usage is Pinterest, with an 18-point difference in favour of women.
The only platforms with a statistically significant difference in favour of men are LinkedIn (6-point difference), Periscope (4-point) and Twitter (3-point).
LinkedIn may be used by only 30% of UK adults online, but it is most popular among people with high household incomes. It is significantly more popular among those taking home £48k+ (64%) than those earning below that threshold (25%).
Those in Scotland (97%) and England (95%) are marginally more likely to be social media users than those in Wales (93%) and Northern Ireland (89%). The same story plays out in daily usage: England (74%), Scotland (73%), Wales (67%) and Northern Ireland (53%).
There is little in it when it comes to usage in the UK’s largest cities. Glasgow takes the lead in both total usage and daily usage (99% versus 78%), closely followed by London and Birmingham (both 97% versus 77%), Manchester (96% versus 76%) and Leeds (95% versus 72%).
Those living in urban areas are more likely to be daily users of social media than their rural counterparts (75% versus 66%). Looking at overall usage, some social media platforms are significantly more likely to be used in urban areas, notably WhatsApp (13-point difference), Instagram (10-point difference), Pinterest and Snapchat (both 7-point difference).
Tom Hashemi (pictured), director of We are Flint, said: “The reason behind this study was to fill a gap in public data on platform-specific UK social media statistics. We went on the hunt for this data ourselves and came back empty-handed. Being supporters of the open source movement, we figured we’d publicly release them.”