Global Smartphone Use Hits 5.3 Trillion Hours in 2025 as Emerging Markets Drive Growth

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Global smartphone usage reached a new high in 2025, with users spending a combined 5.3 trillion hours on iOS and Android devices worldwide. This represents a 3.8 percent increase compared to the previous year, underscoring the continued expansion of mobile-first lifestyles across both developed and emerging markets.

The figures are drawn from the State of Mobile 2026 report released by Sensor Tower, a leading authority on mobile data and digital consumption trends. The report tracks time spent across applications, services, and platforms, offering a clear picture of how deeply smartphones are embedded in daily life.

India emerged as the world’s largest mobile market by time spent, accounting for an estimated 1.23 trillion hours in 2025. Its lead reflects a combination of population size, affordable data access, and the rapid growth of mobile entertainment, payments, and social platforms. Indonesia followed in second place with 414 billion hours, while the United States ranked third at 385 billion hours, driven by high smartphone penetration and sustained engagement across streaming, social, and productivity apps.

Brazil placed fourth with 301 billion hours, highlighting Latin America’s strong mobile culture, while Russia ranked fifth at 200 billion hours. Mexico followed with 175 billion hours, closely trailed by Pakistan at 169 billion hours. The Philippines recorded 153 billion hours, reflecting its reputation as one of the world’s most socially active mobile markets. China Mainland ranked ninth with 148 billion hours, a figure shaped by its regulated but highly developed app ecosystem. Nigeria completed the top ten with 129 billion hours, reinforcing Africa’s growing importance in global mobile consumption.

Together, these markets illustrate a clear shift. Growth is no longer concentrated only in high-income countries. Instead, emerging economies with young populations, expanding connectivity, and mobile-first digital habits are increasingly shaping global usage patterns. As smartphones continue to serve as primary tools for communication, entertainment, commerce, and work, total time spent is likely to keep rising, even as growth rates gradually stabilize.

The 2025 data confirms one central reality: mobile is no longer just a channel. It is the dominant environment through which much of the world now experiences the digital economy.

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