Growing up in the online world: a national consultation

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Government launches a landmark consultation on UK children's digital wellbeing, covering social media age bans, curfews, AI chatbots and gaming.

Why consult

Technology is part of most children’s lives from an early age. It can help children learn, build friendships and develop creativity. But it also brings risks, and many parents, teachers and young people have told us the current situation is not working well enough.

Social media use among children and adolescents is almost universal. The proportion of children with social media profiles has increased significantly in the last 5 years. The government wants to must ensure children can

Government launches a landmark consultation on UK children's digital wellbeing, covering social media age bans, curfews, AI chatbots and gaming.

Why consult

Technology is part of most children’s lives from an early age. It can help children learn, build friendships and develop creativity. But it also brings risks, and many parents, teachers and young people have told us the current situation is not working well enough.

Social media use among children and adolescents is almost universal. The proportion of children with social media profiles has increased significantly in the last 5 years. The government wants to must ensure children can engage with the online world safely, and that parents and carers feel confident to support and empower their children online.

This consultation is the next step in the government’s work to ensure children’s experiences online are safe and enriching. We want to understand how technology impacts children’s wellbeing, and what more we can do to help families strike the right balance.

Background

The Online Safety Act 2023 established one of the strongest systems in the world for protecting children from illegal and harmful content online. This consultation builds on that foundation to consider the broader impact of technology on children’s everyday lives.

Given the importance of the internet and digital services in today’s society, we need to consider whether additional measures could build on our existing approach and ensure the UK remains the safest place for children to be online.

What is the consultation about

The consultation will consider how children use digital technology as well as measures including:

  • setting a minimum age for children to access social media - and what age would be right
  • restricting risky functionalities and design features that encourage excessive use, such as infinite scrolling and autoplay
  • whether the digital age of consent should be raised
  • how age verification and age assurance technologies can support effective implementation
  • whether the guidance on the use of mobile phones in schools should be put on a statutory footing
  • better support for parents, including clearer guidance and simpler parental controls

Who should take part

Responses are welcome from everyone, including children and young people, whose voices are central to this process. A dedicated version of this consultation has been published for children, and a separate version for parents and carers. Views will also be captured through a series of national events taking place over the next 3 months.

What happens next

This consultation will close on the 26 May 2026 and the government has committed to taking swift action on its findings. On 16 February 2026, the Prime Minister announced new legal powers to allow the government to act swiftly after the consultation response, without waiting for new primary legislation. The government will publish their response in summer 2026.

Ways to respond

There are three surveys to choose from, please select one of the links below:

  1. Full consultation for anyone (civil society, industry and members of the public) - Take the survey now
  2. Survey for parents and carers of young people aged 21 and under - Take the survey now
  3. Survey for children and young people - Take the Survey now


Page published: 09 Mar 2026, 01:48 PM