Steady rise in internet use in recent years: BBS

Steady rise in internet use in recent years: BBS

Online Desk

Published: 2025-12-21 18:08:34

There has been a steady rise in internet use in recent years as internet usage at individual level rose from 44.5 per cent in 2023 to 48.9 per cent in 2025.

At the household level, however, technology access appears broader, said the recent ICT Access and Use Survey 2025-26 (1st quarter, July-September) report conducted by the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS).

The survey shows that 98.9 per cent of households have at least one mobile phone, and 72.4 per cent now own a smartphone.

Television is available in 58.9 per cent of households, radio use has fallen to 15.1 per cent, and only 9.1 per cent of homes own a computer. Electricity coverage is almost universal, reaching 98.9 per cent of households.

There has been urban-rural divide as smartphone ownership is far higher in towns and cities, where 80.8 per cent of households have at least one device, compared with 68.8 per cent in rural areas.

The BBS survey covered around 61,632 households across the country aiming to inform national ICT policy as well as international platforms, including the International Telecommunication Union and the SDG Tracker.

According to the findings, online services increasingly shape access to education, healthcare, finance and government support.

By the end of September in 2025, 48.9 per cent of people aged five and above were direct internet users.

At the household level, just over half of homes—about 56.2 per cent—had at least one internet user in the July-September period, according to the report.

At the individual level, the survey found that 80.6 per cent of people use mobile phones, while 56.5 per cent own their own handsets.

Usage among men and women is almost equal, 80.9 per cent for men and 78.8 per cent for women. But, handset ownership and internet access show a gender gap.

About 63.2 per cent of men own a mobile phone compared with 52.8 per cent of women. Internet use follows a similar pattern, with 51.2 per cent of men online compared with 46.3 per cent of women.