Is social media actually bad for mental health?
Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-06
Short answer
The effect is not uniform. Passive scrolling, comparison-heavy feeds and use within an hour of sleep are associated with worse mood, anxiety and sleep — especially in adolescents and young women. Active use for genuine connection is closer to neutral.
What the evidence actually says
The effect depends heavily on how it is used and by whom. Passive consumption (scrolling curated feeds without interacting), comparison-heavy content, and use in the hour before sleep consistently correlate with worse mood, higher anxiety and disrupted sleep — with the largest effects in adolescents and young women. Active use — direct messaging friends, meaningful conversation, communities of support — is closer to neutral or mildly positive.
The practical rules that work
No phone in the bed. No feed in the first 30 minutes of waking. Unfollow anyone whose content leaves you feeling worse. Keep DMs and creative use; cut infinite feeds. If you notice the loop tightening — checking every few minutes, low mood after use, sleep pushed later — treat it as a habit signal and take a 7-day break to reset.
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