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When is the right age to let your child have their first mobile phone?

By: Lauren Abbott labbott@thekmgroup.co.uk

Published: 00:00, 13 January 2016

Updated: 11:50, 13 January 2016

It's a modern parenting dilemma - when to give a child their first mobile phone?

Studies have found that the average child hits double figures and age 10 before being presented with theirs.

And while many adults may worry about the time children spend looking at their screens, the fact is that mobiles can serve a useful purpose for parents.

Mobile and the moral dilemma

A separate survey by Netmums and the online mobile phone retailer e2save found that parents' main motivation for buying children mobile phones was emergencies and safety.

"Most of the time parents are giving mobile phones to children because of safety and keeping in touch," agrees Jeremy Todd, chief executive of the parenting charity Family Lives.

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"Our main concern is if the phone is just being used as a pacifier, to keep children quiet."

Children predominantly use mobiles for calls, texting, playing games and using social apps such as Facebook and Twitter.

Mr Todd explained: "Kids aren't necessarily gaming on mobiles, they're staying in touch with friends, so using mobile phones doesn't necessarily have to be perceived as a bad thing.

When is the right age to make the mobile move?

"But if they're gaming all day long on their phone, they need to be encouraged to try a variety of other things too, including playing outside."

The risk of escalating costs can be a more worrying aspect of children's mobile phone use when line rental, calls and texts as well as the risk of app and online purchases are considered.

Indeed, some parents give their children a phone as a way of teaching financial responsibility.

Dominic Baliszewski, telecoms expert at broadbandchoices.co.uk, said: "It's encouraging to see that children and teenagers nowadays are very technically and digitally aware, and that they're using their mobile phones productively.

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"Costs, however, can easily add up quickly on a mobile phone, particularly with data usage, which we found to be the biggest single contributor to bill shocks.”

He suggests:

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