We weren't distracted by smartphones – and trying to get on the internet with a dial-up modem was more trouble than it was worth.
If we wanted to go shopping, we'd have to actually leave the house and head to the high street.
As for work, there wasn't much hope of doing that from home.
So, as pictures from our archives show, our town centres in the 90s were often bustling.
It was also a decade where the county was visited by several famous faces.
From Elton John and Pavarotti, to Martine McCutcheon and Monica Lewinsky, it seems celebrities couldn't keep away.
To see who else came to town in the 90s – and perhaps even spot yourself – join us on a leisurely stroll down memory lane with the help of these classic pictures...
1990
The year began with Margaret Thatcher still in power and England hopeful of lifting the World Cup. Yet it would all end in tears.
In Kent, history was made on December 1, 1990, when construction workers drilled through the final wall of rock to join the two halves of the Channel Tunnel and link Britain to France.
The UK ended the year with John Major as Prime Minister and Cliff Richard at number one with Saviour's Day.
1991
On October 30, 1991, the Queen opened the Dartford Crossing.
This was also the year which saw the launch of the Darling Buds of May TV series, filmed in and around the villages of Pluckley and Little Chart.
In July, Princess Anne launched the White Cliffs Experience in Dover. The attraction closed eight years later as it fell short of bringing in the anticipated 300,000 visitors a year bosses had hoped for.
1992
Royalty returned to Kent in 1992, with thousands turning out to get a glimpse of Princess Diana.
She was in Tunbridge Wells for the opening of the Royal Victoria Place shopping centre.
This was also the year many retailers started withdrawing vinyl records from their stock, due to the rising popularity of cassettes and CDs.
And while people remember the 90s as the decade of Blur and Oasis, let's not forget Stars, by Simply Red, was the best-selling album in both 1991 and 1992.
Driver Graham Barnes had drunk the equivalent of a bottle of vodka when his train derailed at high speed, coming into the station shortly after 2am, causing almost £2million in damage.
On May 2, 1993, the opening concert was held at Deal Memorial Bandstand, built to commemorate the 11 marines killed in the Provisional IRA bombing of the Royal Marines Barracks in 1989.
1994
The Tour De France came to Kent in 1994.
The race drew three million spectators, with its route running through Dover, Folkestone, Canterbury, Ashford and Tunbridge Wells, on its way to a finishing point in Brighton.
The year also saw the Channel Tunnel officially open, Tony Blair become Labour leader and Lidl open its first stores in Britain.
The three biggest selling songs of the year – which have all since become 90s' classics – were Love Is All Around by Wet Wet Wet, Saturday Night by Whigfield and Stay Another Day by East 17.
1995
This was the year Paul Scally began his long reign as chairman of Gillingham FC, overseeing an upgrade of Priestfield Stadium in the second half of the decade.
The Queen Mother paid a visit to Dover – and later that year, aged 95, is believed to have become the oldest patient to have a hip replacement.
By the end of the year, a whopping 1% of the UK population (600,000 people) had access to the internet.
1996
Kent's links with the continent took a giant leap forward in February 1996 with the opening of the £100m Ashford International Station.
It allowed passengers for the first time to take a train direct to Paris or Brussels and arrive within a couple of hours.
While football fever gripped the country as England hosted Euro 96, there were also celebrations when Gillingham, then managed by Tony Pulis, gained promotion from the old Division Three.
1997
The year will always be marked with sadness in the minds of so many, following the death of Princess Diana on August 31.
The tragedy sparked an outpouring of grief and floral tributes were laid across the county.
And 1997 will also be remembered for the earthquake in British politics caused by New Labour.
Tony Blair's landslide victory left his party with a majority of 179 in the Commons.
In Kent, Labour MPs secured eight out of 17 seats. Today, the party has just one, held by Rosie Duffield in Canterbury.
1998
Construction on major projects was underway in 1998.
While work was beginning on the Millenium Dome in Greenwich, Bluewater in Dartford was nearing completion.
This was also the year when the first DVDs were sold in the UK.
1999
We are now at the final stop on our journey through the 1990s.
And who better to sing us out than Elton John? He performed for three nights in September at Leeds Castle as part of a solo tour spanning North America and Europe.
We hope you've enjoyed this trip down memory lane through Kent.