groupme statistics user count facts 2026

GroupMe Statistics (2026): Usage, Downloads, Group Limits & Key Facts

Updated GroupMe stats for 2026: 2024 usage milestones (2.6B emoji reactions, 11B chat opens, 500M profile views), 5,000-member group limit, 10M+ Android downloads, and key history under Microsoft.

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GroupMe statistics and facts (updated 2026)

GroupMe is a mobile group messaging app that lets people create group chats and send messages, photos, videos, and reactions across iOS, Android, and the web. Launched in 2010, GroupMe became popular for “everyone’s invited” chats—especially for campus life, clubs, roommates, events, and teams—because it works smoothly across phones and supports large groups.

GroupMe is owned by Microsoft (GroupMe was acquired by Skype in 2011; the deal terms were not disclosed). Today, GroupMe remains a standalone app focused on fast group coordination, message reactions, and lightweight community features.

Answer box: GroupMe’s latest official usage snapshot comes from its 2024 Year in Review, which reported 2.6B+ emoji reactions, 11B+ group chat opens, and 500M+ profile views in 2024. GroupMe also says 70%+ of U.S. colleges use GroupMe, and Campus group creation grew 200%+ (2024). For product limits, GroupMe supports up to 5,000 members per group.

Sources: GroupMe blog (2024 Year in Review) and Microsoft Support (group size limit).

Key metrics table (latest available)

GroupMe does not regularly publish a single “monthly active users” (MAU) metric. The table below focuses on verifiable, dated metrics from official sources and public app store listings.

Metric Value Year Source
Emoji reactions shared 2.6B+ 2024 GroupMe blog
Group chat opens 11B+ 2024 GroupMe blog
Profile views 500M+ 2024 GroupMe blog
U.S. college usage (claimed) 70%+ of U.S. colleges use GroupMe 2024 GroupMe blog
Campus group creation growth 200%+ surge 2024 GroupMe blog
Max group size 5,000 members Current Microsoft Support
Google Play downloads 10M+ Current listing Google Play

What GroupMe is used for (and why it still matters)

1) GroupMe is optimized for large, messy group chats

Many messaging apps work great for small circles. GroupMe’s sweet spot is bigger groups—clubs, dorm floors, classes, sports teams, Greek life, family events—where lots of people join, leave, and rejoin over time.

2) Campus usage is a standout signal

GroupMe’s own reporting emphasizes college adoption: 70%+ of U.S. colleges using GroupMe and a 200%+ surge in campus group creation in 2024. That reinforces GroupMe’s positioning as a “default” group coordination layer for student communities.

3) Engagement is the clearest public metric today

GroupMe doesn’t consistently publish MAU/DAU, so the best available visibility comes from engagement milestones—like reactions shared, chat opens, and profile views—when the company releases them.

FAQ

How many people use GroupMe?

GroupMe does not regularly publish an official, current MAU/DAU figure. The most recent official usage snapshot is its 2024 Year in Review, which reported engagement milestones (2.6B+ reactions, 11B+ chat opens, 500M+ profile views).

How many members can be in a GroupMe chat?

Microsoft Support states GroupMe supports up to 5,000 members per group.

Is GroupMe owned by Microsoft?

Yes. Skype announced it would acquire GroupMe in 2011 (terms not disclosed), and GroupMe is now owned by Microsoft.

Is GroupMe free?

GroupMe is free to download and use, and it offers core group messaging features across mobile and web.

Where is GroupMe most popular?

GroupMe is widely associated with student communities and group coordination in the U.S., and its own reporting highlights strong college adoption.

Craig Smith
Craig Smith

DMR Publisher. Director of Marketing by day and I run this little site at night. Other interests include Disney, Sports, 80's Nostalgia, LEGO, Star Wars and Tech Gadgets. Other site is DisneyNews.us.

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