When People Cut Back on Instagram, Where Do They Go?

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When People Cut Back on Instagram, Where Do They Go?

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When People Cut Back on Instagram, Where Do They Go?<br>A new field experiment reveals that when people give up social media, they don't completely switch to another social network platform. They just do something else entirely.

Jadrian Wooten<br>Mar 30, 2026

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Photo by dole777 on Unsplash<br>You know the feeling. You pick up your phone to check one thing, and forty-five minutes later, you’re still doomscrolling through Instagram, watching videos of people you’ve never met. Now imagine a friend calls you out on it. They challenge you to set a timer of thirty minutes a day, max. That’s it.<br>What would you do with all that extra time?<br>Most people would probably say they’d just switch to a different social media app. More TikTok. More Snapchat. Social media competes with social media, right?<br>But a group of researchers recently ran an experiment that may suggest otherwise. They paid thousands of people real money to stop using Facebook and Instagram , then tracked exactly where all that freed-up time went using phone tracking data.<br>It didn’t go to other social networks. It went to gaming apps. To YouTube. And in a result that feels almost quaint, some of it went outside.

Gary Becker’s Theory of Time

Before we talk about their study, you first have to meet Gary Becker. He was a University of Chicago economist who won the Nobel Prize in 1992 , and he had a habit that drove some of his colleagues a little crazy . He applied the economic way of thinking to things economists weren’t used to thinking about. We’re talking about topics like crime, marriage, addiction, and discrimination . He treated human behavior like a set of optimization problems.<br>He published a paper in 1965 that sounds obvious in hindsight but was actually kind of radical for economists at the time. He argued that money isn’t the only scarce resource people have to allocate . Time is too. And people trade off how they spend their hours the same way they trade off how they spend their dollars.<br>After all, we’ve all got 24 hours each day. Some of those hours go to work. Some go to sleep. The rest gets divided across everything else you want to do with your day. But when two activities compete for the same block of time, they become substitutes. Even if they don’t always look alike.

A Field Experiment on Social Media

The researchers behind the experiment were, in a sense, updating Becker for the modern era. They wanted to know: in the attention economy, who’s actually competing with whom?<br>The setup was straightforward . Participants were paid to reduce their time on Facebook or Instagram. They were paid a dollar for every quarter-hour reduction in average daily screen time, benchmarked against their past month of usage, and capped at $125 a week. A control group received payments between $15 and $25 each week just for sharing their usage data. Then the researchers watched where all that free time went.<br>Let me pause here and note that the team included researchers from the University of Chicago, the University of Michigan, UC San Diego, and an economic consulting firm that had done consulting work on behalf of Meta in active antitrust litigation . They disclose it in the paper, but I want to make sure you know it too.<br>What they found is hard to dismiss. When participants cut back on Facebook, only about 6% of that new free time went toward other personal social networks. For those in the Instagram group, about 16% shifted to other personal social networks. The rest scattered to other apps on their phone, and in some cases, some of them went offline entirely.

Substitutes Don’t Have to Look Alike

Economists have a word for products that people swap in and out for each other: substitutes . The classic examples tend to look a lot alike. Think Coke and Pepsi, butter and margarine, or Lyft and Uber.<br>But Becker’s framework pushes us to think broader. Since time is also a scarce resource, substitutes don’t have to look alike at all. The results from the experiment make that case clearly:

Browsers. Texting. Games. When Facebook or Instagram disappeared from someone’s daily routine, that’s where the hours went. For the Instagram group specifically, YouTube was the single biggest beneficiary.<br>Think about what that means. Instagram and YouTube don’t look like competitors. One is photos and short videos from people you know in real life. The other is long videos from creators you’ve probably never met. Different formats, different content, an entirely different feel. And yet they’re fishing in the same pond for you and your...

people time instagram social went experiment

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