KEY POINTS
  • Virtual reality hasn't caught on with American teens, according to a new survey from Piper Sandler released on Tuesday.
  • "To us, the lukewarm usage demonstrates that VR remains 'early days' and that these devices are less important than smartphones," Piper Sandler analysts wrote.
  • Only 4% of teenage headset owners polled used VR daily, the investment firm found.

In this article

A gallery assistant wearing an Oculus Quest 2 virtual reality (VR) headset to view the House of Fine Art (HOFA) Metaverse gallery stands in front of digital artwork "Agoria, _{Compend-AI-M}_ 2022 #16" during a preview in Mayfair, London, UK, on Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022. 

Virtual reality hasn't caught on with American teens, according to a new survey from Piper Sandler released on Tuesday.

While 29% percent of teens polled owned a VR device — versus 87% who own iPhones — only 4% of headset owners used it daily, the investment firm found, and 14% used them weekly.

In this article