The UK Places a Sweeping Ban on Social Media for Kids Under 16

Wired News

Summary

The UK government announced a ban on social media for children under 16, targeting platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, with the aim of protecting kids from online harms. The ban is set to take effect in spring 2027 and also includes restrictions on livestreaming and stranger contact.

The UK government is introducing a ban on social media for children and a minimum age for some chatbots in an attempt to shield young people from dangerous corners of the web.
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# The UK Places a Sweeping Ban on Social Media for Kids Under 16 Source: [https://www.wired.com/story/uk-social-media-under-16-ban/](https://www.wired.com/story/uk-social-media-under-16-ban/) Children under the age of 16 will be banned from social media platforms in the UK, under new measures announced by prime minister Keir Starmer on Monday\. “The need for action could not be clearer\. Social media is making our children unhappy and unsafe,” said Starmer, in[an X post](https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/2066421329859936656)\. “Our children deserve better\.” Under\-16s will lose access to social media platforms including Facebook, Instagram, X, TikTok, Snapchat, and YouTube, while the minimum age for chatbots that imitate romantic interactions will be raised to 18\. The ban does not apply to messaging services WhatsApp and Signal\. Under the new measures, expected to come into force in spring 2027, the UK government will also ban livestreaming features and the ability for strangers to contact children under the age of 16 across all platforms\. In an effort to restrict late\-night doomscrolling, it will also consider introducing an overnight social media curfew for under 18s, with details to follow in July\. The social media ban is characterized by the UK government as an attempt to shield children from extreme and graphic content and other online harms, such as bullying\. “This is a line in the sand,” Starmer[added](https://www.gov.uk/government/news/social-media-to-be-banned-for-under-16s-in-landmark-government-move-to-givekids-their-childhood-back)\. “Tech giants had their chance and failed, but we’re stepping in to protect children, back parents and set a new normal for future generations\.” Meta, X, and TikTok did not respond immediately to requests for comment\. YouTube spokesperson Jay Stoll said: “YouTube is a vital resource for young people,[educators and parents](https://www.youtube.com/howyoutubeworks/youtubes-impact/)\. Blanket bans push kids out of such curated, supervised, beneficial experiences and towards anonymous, less safe services\.” “Because the majority of time spent on Snapchat is in private messaging between friends and family, an outright ban that disconnects teens from those relationships doesn’t make them safer—it may simply push them to less safe platforms,” says Frederika Cook, public policy at Snap\. Though British politicians have considered restricting teenagers’ use of social media for a number of years, the idea has gained in popularity since the Australian government[imposed a similar ban](https://www.wired.com/story/kids-social-media-australia-ban/)—the first of its kind—last November\. The issue has become surprisingly prominent in recent elections at all levels, multiple members of Parliament tell WIRED, and opposition parties have come out in support of a ban\. The UK ban follows a[public consultation](https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/growing-up-in-the-online-world-a-national-consultation)process that ran from March to May, attracting more than 100,000 submissions from parents, academics, lobbyists, government bodies, and the like\. The government announced the new measures before releasing its full findings from the consultation, which it has promised to make public by the end of the summer\. A former special advisor to Starmer’s Labour government, who asked to remain anonymous to discuss internal party matters, says they believe that Starmer rushed through the ban in a bid to shore up parliamentary support, anticipating a challenge to his leadership\. “The issue is a significant one for voters, and high\-pressure by\-elections \[the equivalent of a special election in the US\] and threats of a leadership challenge have forced Downing Street to move,” they say\. A preliminary[research briefing](https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-10468/CBP-10468.pdf)published by the government suggests that the consultation respondents were broadly divided into three camps: those who supported total ban on social media for under 16s; those who supported a ban on particular features; and those who objected to any form of restriction\. More than 90 percent of parents that responded to the consultation[support an outright ban](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/parental-support-for-a-social-media-minimum-age-of-16/parental-support-for-a-social-media-minimum-age-of-16)\. One of the[most vocal advocates](https://www.theguardian.com/media/2025/mar/23/brianna-ghey-mother-esther-calls-for-social-media-ban-for-the-under-16s)was Esther Ghey, mother of transgender teenager Brianna Ghey,[murdered by two fellow schoolchildren](https://www.cps.gov.uk/mersey-cheshire/news/two-teenagers-jailed-life-murder-brianna-ghey)in 2023\. In her submission, Ghey said that her daughter’s mental health struggles were "significantly exacerbated by the harmful content she was consuming online\.”

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