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A quarter of mobile phone users make less than five calls a month – Ofcom

Of those who did make calls, 60% ended their conversation in less than 90 seconds, according to the regulator’s Mobile Matters report.
Of those who did make calls, 60% ended their conversation in less than 90 seconds, according to the regulator’s Mobile Matters report. Of those who did make calls, 60% ended their conversation in less than 90 seconds, according to the regulator’s Mobile Matters report.

A quarter of mobile phone users make less than five standard calls a month, while 6% make none at all, latest Ofcom figures show.

Of those who did make calls, 60% ended their conversation in less than 90 seconds, according to the regulator’s Mobile Matters report.

The study of how around 150,000 people used their Android phone between January 1 and March 31 shows that the number of minutes people spend on mobile calls has continued its steady rise from 132.1 billion in 2012 to 148.6 billion in 2017, a 12% increase.

During the same period, the average amount of mobile data people use each month soared from 0.2 GB (gigabits) to 1.9 GB, an 850% increase.

However previous studies by Ofcom have also found that younger people find making calls daunting and prefer to use messaging services such as WhatsApp.

The study found people in Liverpool spend more time talking on their mobile than those in other major cities at almost seven minutes per average call – more than 40% longer than Londoners.

Source: Ofcom
Source: Ofcom Source: Ofcom

People in Bradford hold the shortest mobile phone conversations on average.

The study, which helps Ofcom to understand mobile users’ needs, shows that they spend most of their time online connected to Wi-Fi (69%), rather than using 3G or 4G.

This helped to explain why 60% of mobile users use less than 1GB of mobile data a month, and only 10% use 5GB or more.

When people are using their mobile data, they are mainly connected to 4G (82% of time), and when they are in an area where a 4G network is available they are able to get online when they attempt to 98.8% of the time.

Mobile data use peaks between 5pm and 6pm, when rush-hour commuters tend to catch up with news and social media, the study found.