The government has confirmed if it will introduce a curfew as part of its social media ban
The Government has confirmed that it will be looking in more detail at introducing overnight curfews as part of its social media ban that it introduced today, June 15.
Sir Keir Starmer announced this morning that under-16s will be banned from a range of social media in a “big moment for our country.” The Prime Minister said the Government is looking to “‘move at speed” to pass the legislation as he made the announcement today (June 15).
The Prime Minister announced the restriction in a Downing Street press conference as he warned social media was having an impact on children’s happiness and mental health.
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Sir Keir said he would not compromise on the “safety and happiness of our children” and that he was confident the ban can be effective but acknowledged some children would find their way around it.
Reports had indicated the announcement would include a night-time social media curfew for 16 and 17 year olds. But in an update after Sir Keir’s speech, the Government has confirmed it will be looking in more detail at overnight curfews and breaks in infinite scrolling for under-18-year-olds and ‘will set out more detail in July’.
Under 16s social media ban to come in next year
Announcing the ban for all children under the age of 16, the Prime Minister confirmed that the Government will seek to pass the legislation before Christmas this year, in the hope that the law will come into effect in early 2027, ‘probably around spring time’.
The government says it plans to use the same model for a social media ban as Australia, which would capture user-to-user platforms, whose purpose is to enable social interaction and which allow users to post material, alongside algorithms.
The ban will therefore include platforms like Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and X. However, messaging services like WhatsApp and Signal will not be included in the social media ban.
So-called AI ‘romantic companion’ chatbots – designed to simulate sexual relationships or roleplay with users – will have to enforce a minimum age of 18. Similar intimate functionalities will be restricted for under-18s on AI chatbots more widely.
The Government also announced that it will take “world leading” action on gaming and live streaming platforms so strangers will not be able to contact children, Sir Keir Starmer said.
Speaking at the press conference, Sir Keir Starmer said: “This is not something I do lightly, and I will not present it as cost-free, as if social media has brought no benefits to young people, because clearly that is wrong.
“But government is always about choices, and it’s clear to me that a full ban is the right choice. I come to it as a parent myself. I know exactly the fears that we all feel when we’re thinking about this issue.
“All I’ve ever wanted for my own children, hand on heart, is for them to be happy and for them to be safe, and I think that’s what any parent wants, but I ask the question now, ‘do we truly believe that social media creates a happy environment for our children?’
“Do we truly believe that it’s a place where they can feel safe? I don’t think I even need to answer those questions, do I? Every parent can see it with their own eyes. Social media is making children unhappy.”
He added that social media was “making it easier for bullies to harass and abuse” children and “could even be harming their mental health – exposing them to content that is dangerous, because that’s what grabs the attention”.
He said: “It’s designed to be addictive, of course it is. Features like the infinite scroll, they’re designed to lock you in for hours, and if nothing else, there’s an opportunity cost to that.
“It stops children doing their homework, reading, playing with their friends outside, going to bed a decent hour. Now that may not sound like much, but these are the activities that help a child develop into an adult.
“We know how important they are. We just never thought that something would come along to threaten them.”
The announcement comes following a public consultation on the issue, which closed on May 26 and received about 116,000 responses, making it the second-largest in history.
Over 83% of parents who responded said social media risks outweigh the benefits for children – with 91% backing a minimum age of 16 before platforms can offer their services to children.
Almost two thirds (62%) of children who responded said restricting the high-risk features would make them safer online. But 72% also said they were worried about feeling left out if restrictions came in.Sir Keir last week issued a three-month ultimatum to Apple and Google to make it technologically impossible for children to take, share or view nude images on their smartphones.
The latest move risks prompting a backlash from Donald Trump’s pro-tech US administration, which warned against a blanket ban for under-16s.
In a response to the consultation, the US embassy in London said the country preferred “narrowly targeted requirements”, that “most content should be accessible by default”, and that age verification requirements could “impose disproportionate compliance burdens on American companies”.



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