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German expert panel suggests social media ban for under-13s

By Thomson Reuters Jun 24, 2026 | 6:52 AM

June 24 (Reuters) – Germany should consider barring under-13s from running their own social media accounts, imposing strict child-safety measures on platforms and introducing a parental duty ​to prevent “digital neglect”, a government‑appointed expert panel has advised.

The ‌commission submitted 56 recommendations to the family ministry for a strategy to protect children and young people online, including the option of a social media ban for under-13s, according to a document published on ‌Wednesday.

The ​government welcomed the recommendations which are now ⁠set to be debated ⁠in the political arena.

“As regards the independent use of social media, I believe that the proposal for a statutory age limit of 13 years is, in principle, the ​right way forward,” said German Minister for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth Karin Prien in a statement.

In ⁠addition to a legal ban on ⁠social media for under-13s, the panel also proposed ​tiered protection standards for the 13–16 and 16–18 age groups, ​seeking to shield young people from online risks without ‌excluding them from digital spaces entirely.

As an alternative, the commission suggests abandoning a uniform age limit in favour of service‑ and function‑specific restrictions based on risk assessments of individual platforms.

A ⁠number of countries, such as Australia, France, Canada, Spain, Slovenia, Greece and Britain, have already introduced social media bans to protect their ⁠young people, or ‌are in the process of doing so.

In ⁠Germany, the ruling conservatives and Social Democrats ​have already ‌spoken out in favour of access restrictions, ​as they ⁠see fake news, AI-generated images, violence and pornography as a threat to children and young people.

Politicians also see a danger that radical political forces are targeting young people from a very early age.

(Reporting by Andreas Rinke, writing by Linda Pasquini, Editing ​by Ros Russell)