The pie charts illustrate the distribution of users across distinct age groups on three platforms (Facebook, Twitter and YouTube).
Overall, the vast majority of users on all the given applications mainly consists of individuals from 18-34 and 35-49 age groups. It is also noticeable that Twitter has the highest concentration of younger adults aged 18-34, whereas elderly people (65+) represent the smallest user base on all three apps.
In terms of the most active age groups, it is noticeable that the age group of 18-34 dominates on Twitter, making up nearly half of its users at 40%, whereas, this figure drops slightly on Facebook with YouTube to 29% and 26%, respectively. Interestingly, the age group of 35-49 demonstrates remarkable consistency across all three networks, accounting for nearly third of user base on Facebook (30%) and exactly 29% on both Twitter and YouTube.
Meanwhile, the remaining three age groups showed quite less activity on the given apps. Individuals aged 50 to 64 represent around a fifth of the audience on YouTube (20%) and Facebook (19%), compared to 18% on Twitter. A similar pattern is visible among the youngest users (10-17), who make up 15% on YouTube and 14% on Facebook, but only 9% on Twitter. Finally, the elderly category (65+) constitutes the smallest share everywhere, peaking at 10% on YouTube, which is more than double its proportion on Twitter (4%).
