Under-16 social media ban announced, as PM says he won't compromise on child safetypublished at 12:10 BST
Katie Williams
Live reporter
Under-16s will be banned from social media platforms as soon as spring 2027, Keir Starmer announced this morning.
Platforms like Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and X are in scope, while messaging services like WhatsApp are not - here's a summary of key changes.
The PM says he will not compromise on the "safety and happiness of our children", accusing platforms of being "designed to be addictive" with features that "lock you in for hours".
Australia was the first country in the world to introduce a similar ban last December - Starmer says the government has learned from Australia and calls new UK measures "world leading".
Australian PM Anthony Albanese congratulated the PM on an "important step".
But six months on from the Australian ban, BBC reporter Tiffanie Turnbull says implementing it remains "incredibly difficult" with 70% of parents in a recent survey saying their children were still on banned platforms.
YouTube, Meta and Snapchat have responded saying the ban could push young people towards "less safe" platforms.
"If that's the best they've got, then I think they're in trouble," says bereaved father Mark Dowey in response.










