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Apple's New Child Safety Features Include Letting Kids Ask to View New Sites

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Although certain child restrictions aren't new at Apple, the company is expanding its parental controls and working with the American Academy of Pediatrics to learn more about digital guidelines for children, the company announced at WWDC 2026.

Sumbul Desai, Apple's vice president of health, said during the company's WWDC keynote presentation that the guide for parents will help "them establish those healthy digital habits using our child safety features." The company is working with researchers to "understand the impact of technology on children's well-being, and are committed to advancing the science in this area."

Here are the child safety protection advancements and new features announced at the event.

Child accounts

Child account parental control features are expanding to block adult websites, only allow access to "age-appropriate media," and allow a slew of parental controls. If your child has an iPhone or iPad currently that isn't on a child account, you can still convert it to one.

Ask to Browse and Ask to Buy

Ask to Browse, a brand new feature, requires a child to ask for permission before visiting a new site. The feature will work with Safari across iPhone, iPad and Mac.

Ask to Buy requires the parent to grant permission before a child account downloads or buys an app. Both Ask to Browse and Ask to Buy are enabled by default for kids under 13, although parents can also turn them on for teenagers.

Parents can control who the child is able to contact on their device. Apple used an example of starting with immediate family, gradually adding in grandparents and then others as the child gets older.

Time allowances

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