Some 51% of all 10-year-olds in Britain own a mobile phone, but that figure rises to 91 % by the time children hit the age of 12, a survey, quoted by an AFP report, said.
The AFP report, quoting the Mobile Life Youth Report, which was commissioned by mobile phone retailer The Carphone Warehouse and advised by the London School of Economics, found that most children used their phones to send SMS rather than talk.
On average, 11- to 17-year-olds send 9.6 text messages a day, almost three times as many as their parents and makes or receives on average 3.5 calls a day, the survey said. Adults make or receive 2.8 calls and send 3.6 texts on a daily basis, it added.
The growing importance of, and reliance on, mobile phones was highlighted in the study, which was carried out by pollsters YouGov on 1,250 children aged 11 to 17, the report said.
Some 78% said having a mobile phone made it easier to keep in contact with friends while 42 % of girls aged 15 to 17 said they would feel 'unwanted' if a day went by without a mobile phone call, the report said.
Other uses include escaping their parents: one in three youngsters said they talk regularly to and/or send texts to people they do not want their parents to know about.