The United Kingdom just drew the hardest line any major Western democracy has taken against Big Tech’s youngest users. Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced on June 14 that Britain will ban children under 16 from accessing ten major social media platforms, with legislation expected to pass before Christmas and full implementation targeted for spring 2027.
The hit list is comprehensive: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, X, YouTube, Snapchat, Threads, Twitch, Kick, and Reddit.
What the ban actually covers
The policy draws a deliberate line between social media and messaging. WhatsApp, Signal, and YouTube Kids are all exempt from the restrictions. The government is targeting platforms built around public feeds, algorithmic content discovery, and social engagement loops, not private communication tools.
This initiative builds on the Online Safety Act of 2023, which introduced age verification requirements designed to keep minors away from harmful material. But where that earlier law focused on gatekeeping specific types of content, the new approach is blunter. Rather than trying to filter what kids see on these platforms, the government has decided to keep them off the platforms entirely.










