Screen Time for 16-Year-Olds

Screen time for a 16-year-old is one of the most-Googled parenting questions for a reason. The right number depends on your kid, your schedule, and what the screens are replacing. Here are workable answers.

The Real Recommendation for a 16-Year-Old

For teens, the metric shifts from hours to whether screens are crowding out sleep, school, exercise, and in-person friendships. If they aren't, you're probably okay.

What Makes This Age Specific

Teenagers WILL find ways around your screen rules. The work shifts from external limits to internal capacity: building the values and self-awareness that lead to good choices when you're not watching.

What Works at 16-Year-Old Specifically

What to Watch For at This Age

For tweens and teens: anxiety, sleep deprivation, withdrawal from family, drop in grades, and obsessive checking of phones. Take these seriously the first time you see them.

Tool: Screen Time Reset Workbook

A printable family workbook designed to reset screen habits without the daily battles. Includes a family agreement template, daily tracker, screen-free activity cards, and a 30-day reset plan. Built by a mom of two who fought the same fight in her own house first.

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One thing: There is no single right number for a 16-year-old. The right amount of screen time is the amount that leaves your kid as their best self the rest of the day. Track that, not the hours.

The Bottom Line

Screen time for a 16-year-old works when it has structure, predictability, and a clear ceiling. The families with the least screen drama aren't the ones with the strictest rules. They're the ones with the most consistent ones.