Studies suggest that children\u27s contributions to housework are minimal. However, much of this research focuses on young adolescents, utilizes data regarding adult tasks, and ignores chores children more often perform. We address these gaps by analyzing longitudinal time-use data collected from teens on the types of household chores they are most likely to perform. We examine gender inequity in teens\u27 contributions to household labor and how it changes over high school. We also explore how teens\u27 household contributions vary by family structure, and by teens\u27 involvement in school and paid work. We find that girls devote more time to household tasks than boys and that this gender gap increases during high school. Teens\u27 efforts are greater in larger families and in single parent families. Lastly, high school males spend more time on extracurricular and leisure activities than girls, who work longer hours in both unpaid and paid labor