Blogs/News

Australia’s New Under-16 Social Media Rules: What Parents Should Know

From 10 December, children under 16 will no longer be able to hold accounts on most major social media platforms. The goal is simple: reduce online risks such as bullying, predators, harmful content, and the rising mental-health impact of excessive screen time.

Which Platforms Are Affected?

Included: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube, X (Twitter), Threads, Twitch, Kick, Reddit.
Not included: Messenger Kids, WhatsApp, YouTube Kids, Kids Helpline, Google Classroom.

How Will It Be Enforced?

Platforms—not parents—must verify age.
Possible methods include ID checks, facial or voice recognition, or behaviour-based age estimation. Self-declared ages will no longer count.

Meta has begun locking under-16s out, and Snapchat already supports verification tools. Other platforms will follow.

Key Concerns

  • Privacy: Sensitive ID or biometric data may be required.
  • Mental health: Sudden loss of online connection may affect teens socially.
  • Workarounds: Kids may try to bypass systems.
  • Gaps: Gaming platforms like Roblox and Discord aren’t included.

Why It May Help

The restrictions aim to create a safer, healthier digital environment with:

  • Reduced exposure to harmful content
  • Less cyberbullying
  • Improved sleep and wellbeing
  • Lower tech dependency

How Parents Can Support Their Child

  1. Reduce screen time gradually before the cutoff.
  2. Acknowledge emotions—losing platforms can feel big.
  3. Check in regularly for signs of withdrawal or stress.
  4. Offer positive alternatives like outdoor play, hobbies and family time.
  5. Model healthy habits by showing balanced device use yourself.