Skip to content
Government Federal

Australia makes history with the social media minimum age

eSafety 2 mins read

eSafety will begin monitoring and enforcing compliance with the Australian Government’s social media minimum age from today, supporting parents and providing a crucial buffer for under 16s developing digital literacy and resilience.

eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said the world-leading initiative was an important new addition to Australia’s online safety framework. 

“Enforcing a minimum account age of 16 will create normative change and give young people a reprieve from powerful and persuasive design features built to keep them hooked, often enabling harmful content and conduct online.  

“We recognise no single safety measure is a silver bullet but restricting social media accounts for under 16s is part of a holistic approach that includes eSafety’s education and outreach; our complaint schemes; our role ensuring industry transparency and compliance with unlawful and age-restricted material codes and standards; and our work promoting Safety by Design

“On this historic day, I urge all Australians to visit eSafety.gov.au to access our comprehensive online safety resources, including our social media minimum age information hub for educators, parents and young people themselves.”

eSafety will continue engaging with industry and educating the public, however, from today its focus will shift from preparing for the social media minimum age to enforcing it.  

Age assurance can involve a range of steps for both new and current users, including reviews and appeals processes. 

These processes may take several days or even weeks to complete fairly and accurately and may include applying multiple age assurance measures to accounts over time. However, eSafety will not hesitate to take enforcement action where it identifies systemic breaches of the law, including seeking penalties of up to $49.5 million. 

As previously indicated, eSafety will be monitoring platforms’ compliance through a variety of channels, including information gathering notices. 

eSafety will provide transparency about enforcement outcomes; however, it must protect the integrity of any investigations it undertakes and therefore will not be commenting on individual investigations. 


Contact details:

For more information,
Phone: 0439 519 684 or [email protected]

 

More from this category

  • Agriculture Farming Rural, Government Federal
  • 15/01/2026
  • 12:55
Farmers for Climate Action

MEDIA RELEASE: Farmers call for stronger climate policy and adaptation authority

15 Jan 2026 Farmers have called for stronger climate policy and a new authority to assist with climate change adaptation The call is made in an open letter to political leaders Farmers for Climate Action has called for stronger climate policy and the establishment of a new authority to help improve investment and coordination of climate adaptation in an open letter to political leaders as fires and floods hurt Australian farmers across the country. The letter, addressed to each of PM Anthony Albanese, Opposition Leader Sussan Ley, Nationals Leader David Littleproud and Greens Leader Larissa Waters, calls for: Cross party…

  • General News, Government Federal
  • 15/01/2026
  • 08:00
e61 Institute

Replace capital gains discount with income averaging

The capital gains tax discount should be replaced with a fairer approach. A potential direction for reform would be to instead allow individuals to spread gains over time rather than taxing them in a single year, according to the e61 Institute. In a submission to the Senate Select Committee on the Operation of the Capital Gains Tax Discount, e61 said the discount is inequitable and distorts the way Australians work, save, invest, and finance their investments. “The current treatment of capital gains income incentivises individuals to invest in capital gains-generating assets, borrow too much, and reclassify earnings as capital gains,”…

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 14/01/2026
  • 07:02
Australian Conservation Foundation

Deforestation doom: 2025 worst year in more than a decade for federally-approved bulldozing of the bush

The Federal government gave the green light to more than 57,000 hectares of threatened species habitatdestructionlast year, making it the worst 12-monthperiod in 15 years. The Australian Conservation Foundation’sExtinction wrapped 2025finds: Thenorthern quollhad moreof itshabitat approved to be destroyed in 2025 than any other threatened animal. WesternAustralia'sPilbararegionis home toall ofthe ‘top’fiveanimal speciesworstaffectedby approved habitat destruction:the northern quoll, night parrot, ghost bat, Pilbaraleaf-nosedbatand Pilbaraolivepython(in that order). A total of42plantsand animalswere added to Australia’s list ofspeciesthreatened with extinction in 2025. Thenight parrotwas movedfrom ‘endangered’ to ‘critically endangered’andis second on the list ofAustralianthreatenedspeciesworstimpactedbyfederally-approveddestructionin 2025. InJanuary2025, ACF reported that 2024 was a record-breaking yearfor…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.