Meta, Snap, TikTok, and YouTube run on one fuel: attention. Now governments want to cut off their youngest users.
At least 14 countries are moving to ban kids from social media. Most draw the line at 15 or 16.
Australia Flipped The Switch First
Australia became the first country to act. Its ban on under-16s took effect in December 2025.
It blocks ten big apps. The list runs from Facebook and Instagram to TikTok, X, YouTube, Reddit, Snapchat, Threads, Twitch, and Kick.
A couple got a pass. WhatsApp and YouTube Kids are not on it.
Break the rule and the fine is steep. Apps face up to $49.5 million Australian dollars, or about $34 million.
And they cannot just ask a user's age. Real age checks are now required.
We break down what moves like this mean for the tech stocks in your portfolio over at Market Briefs - five minutes a morning, with a free investing masterclass when you join.
Why Now
Lawmakers point to real harm. They cite cyberbullying, addiction, and lost sleep.
They also worry about contact from predators. The aim is to make the apps safer for kids.
The pressure has built for months. Parents, schools, and doctors have all pushed for limits.
Not everyone is sold. Critics like Amnesty Tech say the bans are hard to enforce.
They also warn about privacy. Strict age checks mean users hand over more personal data.
Now A Dozen More Are Lining Up
Most of the other plans copy the idea. They draw the line at 15 or 16.
The list keeps growing:
- Under 16: Canada, Germany, Indonesia, Malaysia, Spain
- Under 15: Denmark, France, Greece, Poland, Slovenia, Turkey
- Under 14: Austria
- Still deciding: the UK, which may also force apps to drop endless scrolling
The details differ by country. Canada would let apps off the hook if they prove strong safeguards.
Germany is split on the plan. Its leaders back a ban, but partners in power are wary.
Indonesia is casting a wide net. Its list even reaches games like Roblox.
Denmark is building a "digital evidence" app. It would check ages as part of the ban.
Spain wants to go after the bosses. A planned law would make execs answer for hate speech.
Some have moved fast. France's lawmakers passed a bill, and Turkey's parliament did the same.
Others set a date. Greece plans to flip its switch in January 2027.
What To Watch
These apps treat young users as future grown-up users. Lose the teens in one country and it is a dent.
Lose them across 14, though, and it starts to look like a trend. Each new law also adds a cost.
Age checks are not free. Every rule piles a compliance bill on top of the lost users.
The map is filling in fast. What started in Australia is now a global push.
For the growth stocks behind these apps, the youngest users are the ones lawmakers want gone.
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