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56% of US Adults Would Support a Social Media Ban for Teens

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Why This Matters

The growing support for banning social media for teens highlights a significant shift in how society perceives online safety and youth protection. This trend could lead to substantial regulatory changes worldwide, impacting how tech companies design and manage platforms for younger users. For consumers, especially parents, it underscores the increasing importance of safeguarding children's digital experiences amid ongoing debates about privacy and mental health.

Key Takeaways

It's a problem almost as old as the internet itself: How do we keep kids safe when they're online? A growing campaign argues that the solution is for the government to outlaw social media use during kids' developmental years. A narrow majority of American adults seems to agree.

A new national survey from the Pew Research Center published on July 1 found that 56% of US adults say they would support a social media ban for teens under 16. That number rises to 65% among parents of a child under 18.

The new data provides fuel for major policy drives worldwide to restrict kids' and teens' access to social media platforms. Australia is enforcing its existing under-16 social media ban, passed in late 2025, and both the United Kingdom and Spain are advancing new legislation through parliament to implement similar restrictions, potentially going into effect next year.

In the US, over a dozen states have enacted social media restrictions for youth, and hundreds of bills are under discussion nationwide. Juries in landmark cases in New Mexico and California agreed with plaintiffs that social media giants Meta and Google were exploitative and harmful to young people.

A battle with no end in sight

Over the past two decades, there have been a lot of proposed solutions to child safety online. None has broad agreement among experts.

Bans are one of the more extreme measures proposed. Privacy advocates and youth activists have raised ongoing concerns that bans can lead to more isolation for vulnerable groups like LGBTQ+ youth and restrict teens' right to free expression.

Watch this: Google Sued Over AI Search, the Future of Touchscreen MacBooks, and Canada Targets Teen Social Media Use | Tech Today 03:16

Support for other measures to keep kids' social media use in check is "even more widespread today than in 2023," Pew wrote. The vast majority (85%) say they would support a requirement that made teens get a parent's approval before creating a social media account.

Many (78%) think people should be required to verify their age before scrolling social feeds. And time limits, one of the most popular strategies to rein in teens' screen time, has strong support at 78% as well.

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