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Web Surfers Spending About 13 Hours a Week Online

December 23, 2009

A new Harris Poll finds that adult Internet users are now spending an average of 13 hours a week online. Of course, people's usage varies greatly; one in five (20%) of adult Internet users are online for only two hours or less a week while one in seven (14%) are spending 24 or more hours a week online.

These are a few of the results of a Harris Poll of 2,029 adults surveyed by telephone between July 7 and 12 and October 13 and 18, 2009 by Harris Interactive.

Over the years the average hours spent online have increased from 7 hours in 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2002, to between 8 and 9 hours in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006. In 2007, it increased to 11 hours. Last year (in October after the financial crisis broke and before the presidential election) Internet users were online for 14 hours a week, double what it was from 1999 to 2002.

Those who are online

Other interesting findings in this Harris Poll include:

· The age groups that spend the most time online are those aged 30-39 (18 hours) and those aged 25-29 (17 hours) and 40-49 (17 hours).

· Half (50%) of all those online bought something on the Internet in the last month. This includes 62% of those aged 30-39 and 56% of those aged 40-49.

· The number of adults online, now 184 million (80%), has not changed significantly since 2008 and 2007. This includes those online at work, at home, at school or any other locations.

· However, the number of adults who are online at home has increased to 76% this year, and 75% last year, compared to 70% in 2006, and 66% in 2005.

So what?

The increase in the number of hours spent online in the last two years compared to all previous years is striking. It probably reflects a growing ability to use the Internet, an increase in sites and applications, increased TV watching online and increased purchasing online. Also, hours online may have increased because of the recession. Going online is free; going out usually costs money.

TABLE 1

ONLINE FROM HOME, WORK OR OTHER LOCATION - TRENDS 1995–2009

"At home/at work/at another location, do you personally use a computer to Access the Internet/World Wide Web?"

"Excluding email, how many hours per week, on average, do you typically spend on the Internet or World Wide Web?"

Base: All adults

 

Online Adults

Average  (Mean) Hours Per Week Spent Online

Total

Online at Home

Online at Work

Online at Other Location

%

%

%

%

 

2009 – July/October

80

76

40

32

13

2008 - October/October

81

75

43

32

14

2007 - July/October

79

72

37

31

11

2006 - February/April

77

70

35

22

9

2005 - February/April

74

66

36

21

9

2004 - June/ August

73

65

34

17

8

2003 - October/December

69

61

31

16

9

2002 - November/December

67

57

28

18

7

2001 - September/October

64

52

28

19

7

2000 - October/November

63

49

29

17

7

1999 - December

56

46

N/A

N/A

7

1998 - January/February

35

22

22

N/A

N/A

1997 - May/June

30

16

18

N/A

N/A

1996 - June/September

19

16

16

N/A

N/A

1995 - September/November

9

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Note: N/A means "not asked" 

TABLE 2

HOURS SPENT EACH WEEK ONLINE – BY AGE

"How many hours per week do you typically spend on the Internet or World Wide Web?"At home/at work/at another

Base: Online users

 

Total

Age

18-24

25-29

30-39

40-49

50-64

65+

 

%

%

%

%

%

%

%

Less than 1 hour

1

-

-

1

1

1

4

1 – 2 hours

19

19

19

9

22

22

29

3 – 5 hours

24

23

16

30

22

24

22

6 – 7 hours

6

5

6

4

7

7

11

8 – 15 hours

27

33

22

29

25

25

21

16 – 23 hours

7

5

11

8

9

7

5

24 – 168 hours

14

15

26

19

12

13

7

MEAN

13

14

17

18

17

15

8

TABLE 3

PURCHASED ONLINE IN LAST MONTH – BY AGE

"Last month did you purchase any products or services over the Internet?"

Base: Online users

 

Total

Age

18-24

25-29

30-39

40-49

50-64

65+

 

%

%

%

%

%

%

%

Yes

50

35

41

62

56

54

37

No

50

64

58

38

44

46

63

Not sure

*

1

1

-

-

-

1

Note:  Percentages may not add up exactly to 100% because of rounding. 

TABLE 4

PC AND INTERNET USE - TRENDS 1995-2009

"Do you personally use a computer at home, work or another location?"

"At home/at work/at another location, do you personally use a computer to Access the Internet/World Wide Web?"

Base: All adults

 

Proportion of All Adults (from work, home, school or other location)

Percent of Computer Users Who Are Online

Use PC

Are Online

%

%

%

2009 - July/October

82

80

98

2008 - October/October

83

81

98

2007 - July/October

81

79

97

2006 - February/April

81

77

95

2005 - February/April

79

74

94

2004 - June/ August

78

73

93

2003 - October/December

75

69

92

2002 - November/December

74

67

92

2001 - September/October

73

64

88

2000 - October/November

74

63

85

1999 - December

69

56

81

1998 - January/February

63

35

56

1997 - May/June

61

30

49

1996 - June/September

54

19

35

1995 - September/November

50*

9

18

Notes: 

1. All samples of 2,000 or more adults, conducted by telephone.

2. "Are Online" includes all adults who use Internet from home, office, school, library or other location.

* Estimated from other sources.
 

TABLE 5

ESTIMATED NUMBERS OF ADULTS WHO ARE ONLINE (IN MILLIONS)

"At home/at work/at another location, do you personally use a computer to Access the Internet/World Wide Web?"

Base: All adults

 

In Millions

2009 - July/October*

184

2008 - October/October

184

2007 - July/October

178

2006 - February/April

172

2005 - February/April

163

2004 - June/August

156

2003 - October/December

146

2002 - November/December

140

2001 - September/October

127

2000 - October/November

121

1999 - December

113

1998 - January/February

70

1997 - May/June

59

1996 - June/September

33

1995 - September/November

17.5

*Based on July 2008 U.S. Census estimate released January 2009 (230,117,000 total adults aged 18 or over)

Methodology

This Harris Poll was conducted by telephone within the United States July 7 and 12 and October 13 and 18, 2009 among 2,029 adults (aged 18 and over). Figures for age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, region, number of adults in the household, number of phone lines in the household were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population.

All sample surveys and polls, whether or not they use probability sampling, are subject to multiple sources of error which are most often not possible to quantify or estimate, including sampling error, coverage error, error associated with nonresponse, error associated with question wording and response options, and post-survey weighting and adjustments. Therefore, Harris Interactive avoids the words "margin of error" as they are misleading. All that can be calculated are different possible sampling errors with different probabilities for pure, unweighted, random samples with 100% response rates. These are only theoretical because no published polls come close to this ideal.

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