Austria plans social media ban for children under 14


A smartphone with displayed social app icons in this illustration taken February 3, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

VIENNA, March 27 (Reuters) - Austria's ⁠conservative-led, three-party government plans to introduce a ban on ⁠social media use for children under 14, it said ‌on Friday.

Cabinet members from the three ruling parties announced a deal between them on the principle of a ban, aimed at protecting children from "algorithms ​that are addictive" and content including sexual ⁠abuse, but could not ⁠say when it would begin, and they have yet to agree ⁠on ‌how it will be implemented.

"We will decisively protect children and young people in future from the negative ⁠effects of social media," Vice Chancellor Andreas Babler ​of the Social ‌Democrats said.

"We will no longer stand by and watch ⁠while these platforms ​make our children addicted and often also sick ... The risks associated with this use were ignored for long enough, and now ⁠it is time to act," he added.

Australia ​introduced a social media ban for under-16s in December, the first country to do so. Various countries are considering or moving ⁠towards similar bans. France's lower house of parliament approved a ban for under-15s in January.

Draft legislation for Austria's ban would be drawn up by the end of June, Babler and conservative ​junior minister for digitization Alexander Proell said.

Babler ⁠also said the government would not list individual platforms the ​ban would apply to but rather ‌would decide based on how addictive ​their algorithms are and whether they include content such as "sexualised violence".

(Reporting by Francois Murphy; Editing by Alison Williams)

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