Kids blocked from YouTube as social media ban expands

Jul 30, 2025, updated Jul 30, 2025
YouTube was initially spared from Australia's social media ban for children. Picture: AAP
YouTube was initially spared from Australia's social media ban for children. Picture: AAP

Australian children will be barred from using YouTube after the government confirmed the video-sharing website will fall under its social media ban.

The website was initially spared from the ban for under-16s as part of an exemption for health and education services.

But advice from eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant has encouraged the government to change its tune.

YouTube will join other platforms such as Snapchat, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok which were included under the ban when legislation passed parliament in late 2024.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese maintained barring children from such platforms would prevent social harms, once the ban comes into effect in December.

“There is no doubt that Australian kids are being negatively impacted by online platforms so I’m calling time on it,” he said.

“Social media is doing social harm to our children, and I want Australian parents to know that we have their backs.”

A spokesperson for YouTube said it was considering its next steps.

“We share the government’s goal of addressing and reducing online harms,” the company said.

“Our position remains clear: YouTube is a video sharing platform with a library of free, high-quality content, increasingly viewed on TV screens. It’s not social media.

“The government’s announcement reverses a clear, public commitment to exclude YouTube from this ban.”

The video-sharing platform’s inclusion has been foreshadowed since the online safety watchdog in June cited research that found children were exposed to harmful content on YouTube more than any other platform.

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YouTube’s parent company Google has threatened to sue the federal government on the grounds the ban restricts the implied constitutional freedom of political communication.

But in June, Inman Grant said the new proposal would prevent those under 16 only from having an account, not from accessing content.

Educators can continue to use school-approved educational YouTube content through their own accounts.

Under the legislation, age-restricted social media platforms will face fines of up to $49.5 million if they fail to prevent people younger than 16 from creating accounts.

The move was celebrated by the government and Coalition but there are reservations about whether it will work and its potential effect on marginalised children, particularly those in rural or regional Australia who use the internet to seek community.

Preliminary findings released by a federal government-commissioned trial in June found there was no guarantee technologies aimed at blocking young kids from social media would always work.

While there were a plethora of approaches that would work in different ways, the age-assurance technology trial’s early findings revealed there was no single, ubiquitous answer that would fit every use case.

Communications Minister Anika Wells acknowledged there was no “one perfect solution”  but said the rules would still offer kids reprieve from the “persuasive and pervasive” pull of social media.

The age-assurance technology trial’s final report will be published later in 2025.

-with AAP

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