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A new study says more teens than expected are leaving Facebook for Instagram and Snapchat

Facebook’s teen problems may be back, says eMarketer.

Three teenage girls look at their phones while sitting beside a fountain in London.
Three teenage girls look at their phones while sitting beside a fountain in London.
Richard Baker / Getty Images

Teens are leaving Facebook faster than expected, according to a new study from research firm eMarketer.

The study estimates that Facebook’s user base among 12- to 17-year-olds in the U.S. will shrink by 3.4 percent in 2017, the first time eMarketer has predicted a decline in Facebook usage for any age group. The company said that it “reduced its usage estimates” for Facebook, but didn’t originally include what the previous estimates were and did not immediately reply to a request for clarification.

The firm also said its estimates for usage among users 18- to 24-years-old “will grow more slowly than previously forecast, too.”

Regardless of what they were, a revised slowdown is obviously bad news for Facebook.

Update: An eMarketer spokesperson sent along prior growth estimates from Q1. The firm originally expected Facebook’s 12- to 17-year-old audience to grow by 0.7 percent this year. It predicted Facebook’s 18- to 24-year-old user base would grow by 0.8 percent.

The good news? Lots of the teens leaving or forgoing Facebook are turning to Instagram instead, which Facebook owns.

Snapchat, too, is stealing some of Facebook’s teen audience. In fact, eMarketer believes that Snapchat will be bigger than both Facebook and Instagram in the 12- to 17-year-old and 18- to 24-year-old categories by the end of the year. That would be a first.

“Both [Instagram and Snapchat] have found success with this demographic since they are more aligned with how they communicate — that is, using visual content,” eMarketer analyst Oscar Orozco was quoted on the company’s blog.

Snapchat will grow by 19.2 percent this year in the 18- to 24-year-old demographic, eMarketer estimates. Instagram is expected to grow its 12- to 17-year-old audience by 8.8 percent.

This is not the first time Facebook has been saddled with a “teen problem.” It has been almost four years since Facebook first hinted on a company earnings call that the social giant’s teen audience was decreasing. The news sent its stock down after an otherwise positive earnings report, and people spent years wondering if Facebook had a problem retaining its young users.

That whole exercise proved a bit exaggerated. Since those comments were made, Facebook has added more than 800 million monthly users, and its stock has more than tripled.

But the concern, of course, is that Facebook will lose out on the next generation of internet users, and with them, a lot of valuable eyeballs for advertisers.


This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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