The UK government has announced plans to launch a consultation on whether social media use should be banned for children under the age of 16, with a formal response expected this summer.
The move follows Australiaโs introduction of a similar ban in December 2025, described as the first such law in the world. Several other countries are now reported to be considering comparable measures.
Consultation and Timeline
The Department of Science, Innovation and Technology said the process will โseek views from parents, young people and civil societyโ on how effective such a ban might be. The consultation will also examine whether social media companies should be required to introduce more robust age verification checks.
Technology Secretary Liz Kendall stated that existing laws in the Online Safety Act were โnever meant to be the end pointโ and that โparents still have serious concernsโ about childrenโs online safety.
โWe are determined to ensure technology enriches childrenโs lives, not harms them – and to give every child the childhood they deserve,โ she said.
As part of immediate action, the government plans to give Ofsted new powers to check schoolsโ policies on mobile phone use, with an expectation that schools will be โphone-free by defaultโ. Ofsted will also issue tougher guidance aimed at reducing phone use, including instructing staff not to use their own phones for personal reasons in front of pupils.
Parliamentary Pressure
The House of Lords is expected to vote on Wednesday on a proposed ban via an amendment to the Childrenโs Wellbeing and Schools Bill. The amendment has attracted support from former childrenโs TV presenter Baroness Benjamin and former education minister Lord Nash.
A separate amendment would introduce film-style age ratings for social media, potentially restricting which apps children can access.
Political Response
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch described the consultation as โmore dither and delayโ from Labour, saying her party would introduce a legal social media ban for under-16s if it were in power.
โThe prime minister is trying to copy an announcement that the Conservatives made a week ago, and still not getting it right,โ she argued.
Liberal Democrat education spokeswoman Munira Wilson warned that โthere is no time to waste in protecting our children from social media giantsโ and that โthis consultation risks kicking the can down the road yet again.โ
Education Sector Views
National Education Union general secretary Daniel Kebede welcomed the move as a โwelcome shiftโ, saying that โevery day, parents and teachers see how social media shapes childrenโs identities and attention long before they sit their GCSEs, pulling them into isolating, endless loops of content.โ
The Association of School and College Leaders also welcomed the consultation but criticised the government for being โsluggishโ in dealing with online risks to children. General secretary Pepe DiโIasio said there is โclearly a much wider problem of children and young people spending far too much time on screens and being exposed to inappropriate content.โ
However, Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, objected to Ofstedโs proposed enforcement role, calling the suggestion that Ofcom should โpoliceโ phones in schools โdeeply unhelpful and misguidedโ.
โSchool leaders need support from government, not the threat of heavy-handed inspection,โ he added.
Divided Expert Opinion
More than 60 Labour MPs have written to the prime minister calling for action on social media use by children. The intervention was accompanied by calls from Esther Ghey, mother of murdered teenager Brianna Ghey, urging the government to act.
In a letter seen by the BBC, Mrs Ghey wrote that โsome argue that vulnerable children need access to social media to find their community,โ but stated, โas the parent of an extremely vulnerable and trans child, I strongly disagree.โ
She said that in Briannaโs situation โsocial media limited her ability to engage in real-world social interactionsโ and that her daughter โhad real friends, but she chose to live online instead.โ
However, a group of 42 individuals and organisations, including the NSPCC, Childnet and the Molly Rose Foundation, have argued that an outright ban would be โthe wrong solutionโ. They wrote that such a ban โwould create a false sense of safety that would see children – but also the threats to them – migrate to other areas online.โ
Professor Amy Orben, who leads the Digital Mental Health programme at the University of Cambridgeโs MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, told the BBC there is โbroad agreementโ that more must be done to keep children safe online, but said there is still โnot strong evidenceโ that age-based social media bans are effective.
Dr Holly Bear of Oxford University, whose work focuses on mental health interventions for young people, agreed that the evidence on the impact of a social media ban is โstill unfoldingโ. She suggested that โa balanced approach might be trying to reduce algorithm-driven exposure to harmful content, improving safeguards, supporting digital literacy and carefully evaluating any major policy interventions.โ
Potential Measures
According to the consultationโs scope, social media firms could be compelled to introduce stronger age-verification checks if a ban goes ahead. They could also be required to remove or restrict features โwhich drive compulsive use of social media,โ targeting design elements that keep children engaged online for extended periods.โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
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Government to Consult on Social Media Ban for Under-16s
James Whitmore
Covers UK politics, government policy, and parliamentary affairs with a focus on accuracy, balance, and public accountability.
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