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Sweden weighs social media age limit of 15

By Thomson Reuters Jun 2, 2026 | 9:38 AM

STOCKHOLM, June 2 (Reuters) – Sweden should introduce a minimum age of 15 for the use of social media, a ​government-appointed commission recommended on Tuesday.

• Several ‌European nations are seeking to rein in children’s use of social media after Australia took the lead with a world-first ban on under-16s in ‌December ​last year.

• “The reasons for ⁠introducing an age limit ⁠nevertheless outweigh the benefits of continued free access to this type of media,” Swedish investigator Lisa Englund Krafft told a ​news conference with Social Affairs and Public Health Minister Jakob Forssmed.

• A ban ⁠can be formulated in ⁠a way that the platform ​companies would be responsible for the task of ​age verification, she said.

• In Sweden, there ‌is currently a limit of 13 years for when children must have parental consent to create accounts on social media.

• “We ⁠are losing an entire generation to endless scrolling,” Forssmed told the press conference. “Screens and social media ⁠and their ‌impact on the health of ⁠children and young people is one ​of ‌the biggest challenges of our ​time.”

• In ⁠neighbouring Norway, the government said in April it plans to submit a bill to parliament by year-end on banning social media use by under-16s.

(Reporting by Anna Ringstrom, Editing by ​William Maclean)