November 2024 tracker survey
Insights into children’s digital use
Twice per year, we conduct a survey with 1,000 9-17-year-olds and 2,000 parents of children aged 3-17. This most recent data comes from our November 2024 survey.
Explore the latest results below to support children’s digital safety and wellbeing online.

November 2024 survey insights
The following key insights come from the latest wave.
Our research consistently finds that vulnerable children are more likely to encounter harm online than their non-vulnerable peers, such as coming across violent content (18%, compared to 12%).
We also find that girls are disproportionately exposed to certain harms, such as being bullied online by people they know (13%, compared to 7%).
We find that many children don’t have the media literacy skills needed to keep themselves safe online. For example, 35% of children don’t know how to unfollow or unsubscribe from content and more than half of children don’t know how to report content or users.
Since November 2023, the percentage of parents who are concerned about radical and extremist content has risen by 22%. Similarly, there has been a 15% rise in parents who are concerned about child-on-child sexual abuse and harassment, suicide content and self-harm content. 92% of parents are concerned about at least one online harm.
Explore past insights
See our tracker survey insights over previous years.