Teléfonos
Figuring out what age should a kid get a phone can feel like one of those parenting questions with no clear answer. That's because there's no single answer.
What matters most isn’t a specific age. It’s whether your child is ready, why they need a device, and how much access you want that first phone to have. For many families, the best first step isn’t a full smartphone. It’s a simpler device that helps you stay connected without opening the door to everything else.
If you’re trying to decide when to give your child a phone, think less about what’s “normal” and more about what solves the problem in front of you.
Do you need a way to reach them after school? Do they need to contact you from practice? Are they asking because they're ready, or because their friends have one?
Once you answer those questions, the right device becomes easier to choose. First, it helps to start with the question most parents ask.
There's no single recommended age when every child should get a phone. A better answer is this: it depends on your child's maturity, your family's routine, and what you need the device to do.
That may be less satisfying than a number, but that’s the reality. According to a 2025 Pew Research Center poll, about 57% of kids between 11 and 12 have their own phone.1 That average can be useful, but it’s not a rule. In the same poll, parents said the top reason they get their child a phone is to stay in contact with them, at 81%.2
A 6-year-old who's always with an adult probably doesn't need a phone. An 11-year-old who walks home from school, manages activities, and follows house rules may be ready. A 9-year-old may not need a personal phone unless there's a specific family situation.
So, if you're asking, "Is it normal for an 11-year-old to have a phone?" or "Is 8 too early for a phone?" the better question is whether your child is ready to use one responsibly. That's why readiness matters more than age.
Usually, no. Readiness matters more.
If your child can follow household rules, keep track of important things, and understand that online choices have consequences, they may be ready for some kind of device. If they still struggle with routines or resist limits, a phone may create more stress than it solves.
A few signs of readiness include:
That's why decisions about a "kid's first phone" usually work better when you focus on behavior. One child may be ready, while another may not.
You can also test this before giving your child a full smartphone. Some families start with a limited device or a shared phone, along with a clear family agreement covering who their child can contact, when the device can be used, and what happens if rules are broken.
Once you frame the decision around safety and independence, it’s easier to see why many families are making the move earlier than they used to.
Kids' schedules are busier, and family logistics are more complicated. That's a big reason kids are getting phones earlier.
If your child moves between school, after-school care, sports, grandparents' houses, or different households, a phone can feel less like a luxury and more like a basic tool. You may just want them to be able to call or text when plans change or to let you know they got where they were supposed to go.
That aligns with the research. A Kennesaw State University study found that parents most often give kids phones for safety, communication, and convenience.3 For many families, staying connected is the priority.
You can see that shift in the way parents talk about independence now. A child who starts walking home, staying home briefly after school, or waiting to be picked up after practice may not need a full smartphone. However, they may need a reliable way to reach you.
That's why the real decision often isn't whether your child needs a phone. It's what kind of phone or device makes sense first.
When parents and kids disagree about phones, they're usually not talking about the same thing. Your child may be thinking about games, videos, texting, and fitting in. You're probably thinking about safety, communication, school distractions, and internet exposure.
The best way to bridge that gap is to get clear on what you need the device to do. If your main goal is reaching your child and letting them reach you, that doesn't automatically mean they need a smartphone. If they also need messaging, school tools, or a camera, a more advanced device may make sense, but with limits.
This is where your rules matter as much as the device. It helps to set expectations early:
Tools like parental controls, screen time limits, location alerts, and school mode can help, but they work best when they support clear family rules instead of replacing them.
It also helps to treat the first phone as a trial, not a lifetime contract. Start small, set boundaries, and revisit the setup after a month or two. If your child handles it well, you can expand access later.
If you’re choosing a first phone for kids, you don’t have to start with a full smartphone.
A smartphone gives your child a lot at once: texting, calling, apps, games, a camera, internet access, and social media potential. That may work for some older kids. But if your child is younger, or you only need basic communication and safety features, that may be more access than you want.
A dedicated kids' device sits in the middle. These devices focus on key functions like calling, messaging, location sharing, and approved contacts. They often have fewer distractions and little or no open internet access.
While there’s no one right choice, it’s worthwhile to take time to check out the must-have features for your child’s first phone or device.
When choosing a cell phone for kids, focus on what you actually need, not the longest feature list.
Many parents want the same core things:
If that sounds like your list, too, here are the features worth prioritizing in a kid’s first phone or device:
If you want more oversight after your child gets a device, a parental controls app can help manage location, screen time, and other settings.
You may also want to think beyond the device itself. If your child is spending more time without you, such as being home alone after school, latchkey kid safety tips can help you set ground rules. If your child will have online access, it’s worth reviewing the basics of internet safety for kids from the start.
The goal isn't to find the flashiest phone. It's to choose a device your child can handle and that you can manage with confidence.
Of course, cost matters too, and for many families, it matters a lot.
Your child's first phone isn't just a parenting decision. It's a budget decision too.
Costs can add up quickly once you factor in the device, monthly service, and extra apps or safety tools. That's why it helps to focus on what your child needs now instead of buying for a future stage they haven't reached yet.
The Pew Research Center found in 2025 that lower-income parents were more likely than middle- and upper-income parents to say their child has their own smartphone. The same report found that 68% of parents said children should be at least 12 before having a smartphone of their own.4 That suggests many families may prefer to wait, but practical needs often come first.
For some households, a child's device isn't an extra convenience. It's one of the main ways to stay connected across work schedules, school pickups, and shared caregiving. Access to a device can be directly tied to safety and communication.
If you're trying to keep costs under control, a dedicated kids device may be a better starting point than a full smartphone plus extra subscriptions. Starting with a simpler tool can mean a lower monthly bill and fewer risks to manage at once.
For many families, the smartest approach is to do this in stages. Start with the least complicated option that meets your needs today. As your child gets older and shows more responsibility, you can add more freedom and features.
That's the clearest answer to the original question: What age should a kid get a phone? There's no single number that works for every family. What matters most is your child's readiness, your family's routine, your budget, and the kind of device that helps you stay connected without creating more problems than it solves.
If you’ve decided your child is ready for a device, the next step is finding the right fit for your family’s needs, budget, and comfort level. The AT&T amiGOTM family of devices is a great start for a kid’s first device. You can compare our full lineup of phones and explore AT&T phone plans to find an option that helps you stay connected on your terms.
Connecting changes everything. We’re here to help keep you connected.

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