World Happiness Report highlights social media's negative impact, ranks
Finland as happiest country
[March 19, 2026]
By KOSTYA MANENKOV and KIRSTEN GRIESHABER
HELSINKI (AP) — Heavy social media use contributes to a stark decline in
well-being among young people, with the effects particularly worrying in
teenage girls in English-speaking countries and Western Europe,
according to the World Happiness Report 2026 published Thursday.
The annual report, published by the Wellbeing Research Centre at the
University of Oxford, also found that Finland is the happiest land in
the world for the ninth year in a row, with other Nordic countries such
as Iceland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway ranking among the top 10
countries.
It highlighted how life evaluations among under 25-year-olds in the
United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand have dropped
significantly over the past decade, and suggested that long hours spent
scrolling through social media is a key factor in that trend.
Costa Rica jumps to 4th place; Nordic countries stay on top
A new entry to the top five on the list is Costa Rica, which climbed to
fourth place this year after rising through the ranks from 23rd place in
2023.
The report attributes that to well-being boosts from family bonds and
other social connections.
“We think it’s because of the quality of their social lives and the
stability that they currently enjoy,” said Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, an
Oxford economics professor who directs the Wellbeing Research Centre and
co-edits the World Happiness Report.

“Latin America more generally has strong family ties, strong social
ties, a great level of social capital, as a sociologist would call it,
more so than in other places,” he added.
The report said Finland and the other Northern European countries’
steady ranking on top is related to a combination of wealth, its equal
distribution, having a welfare state that protects people from the risks
of recessions, and a healthy life expectancy.
As in previous years, nations in or near zones of major conflict remain
at the foot of the rankings. Afghanistan is ranked as the unhappiest
country again, followed by Sierra Leone and Malawi in Africa.
Country rankings were based on answers given by around 100,000 people in
140 countries and territories who were asked to rate their own lives.
The study was done in partnership with the analytics firm Gallup and the
U.N. Sustainable Development Solutions Network.
In most countries, approximately 1,000 people are contacted by telephone
or face-to-face each year.
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Young people use their phones to view social media in Sydney, Nov.
8, 2024. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft, File)
 Teenage girls especially
vulnerable
Respondents were asked to evaluate their lives on a scale from 0 to
10. Among under-25s in English-speaking and Western European
countries, that score dropped by almost one point over the past
decade.
The report said the negative correlation between well-being and
extensive social media use is particularly concerning among teenage
girls. For example, it said that 15-year-old girls who use social
media for five hours or more reported a drop in life satisfaction,
compared to others who use it less.
Young people who use social media for less than one hour per day
report the highest levels of well-being, researchers said, higher
than those who do not use social media at all. But adolescents are
spending an estimated average of 2.5 hours a day on social media.
“It is clear that we should look as much as possible to put the
‘social’ back into social media,” De Neve said.
Algorithmic feeds and influencers seen as culprits
Researchers noted that in some parts of the world, such as the
Middle East and South America, the links between social media use
and well-being are more positive — and youth well-being has not
fallen despite heavy social media use.
The report said this is due to many factors that differ between
continents, but concluded that heavy social media use in some
countries is an important contributing factor to the decline in
youth well-being.
It said the most problematic platforms are those with algorithmic
feeds, feature influencers and where the main material is visual,
because they encourage social comparisons. Those who use platforms
that mainly facilitate communication do better.
The 2026 rankings mark the second year in a row that none of the
English-speaking countries appear in the top 10. The United States
is at 23rd place, Canada is at 25th and Britain at 29th.
The report, with its focus on social media, comes at a time when
more and more countries have banned or are considering bans of
social media for minors.
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Grieshaber reported from Berlin.
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