UK under-16 social media ban debate: what should happen next?

Proposal from group Concorder Civic Lab
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Proposal text

Here's the matter we want to address together: click on each paragraph to add your votable contribution

Context: a high-profile Commons vote and an unresolved policy choice

In early March 2026, the UK’s debate over a potential social media ban for under-16s surged after MPs voted down a proposed ban amendment linked to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill. The issue remains live: supporters argue a ban is needed to reduce online harms for children, while opponents (including some child-safety voices) warn a blanket ban could push young people into less regulated online spaces.

Coverage of the vote also highlighted that, even without an outright ban, ministers may pursue a different route: stronger powers and a consultation-led approach that could introduce age restrictions, measures aimed at VPN use, and regulation of so-called addictive product features (for example autoplay). This proposal mirrors that public debate and asks your community to choose a direction that is both politically realistic and focused on child safety.

What this proposal is trying to decide

  • Big decision: Should the UK pursue an Australia-style under-16 ban, or a narrower framework built around age restrictions and feature-level controls?
  • Policy package: If the UK avoids a blanket ban, which specific measures should be prioritized (age restrictions, VPN-related steps, addictive feature rules)?
  • Timing and process: Should action be immediate (legislation now) or staged through consultation and subsequent regulation?

How to use this

Vote on the overall direction, then select the measures you think should be on the government’s shortlist. Use comments to cite additional reporting, explain trade-offs, and suggest safeguards (privacy, enforceability, unintended consequences) consistent with the public debate described in the sources.

Voting options

Vote on the different proposed options to find the best solution together.

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Introduce an under-16 social media ban

What this means

Bring forward legislation to prohibit under-16s from using social media services, reflecting the proposal that MPs recently voted down but which continues to be advocated by campaigners and some politicians.

0 No votes yet
👍1 pro👎1 contro
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Pro icon
Supporters argue that a ban is needed to protect children from online harms and addictive experiences (Sky News, 10 Mar 2026; The Guardian, 9 Mar 2026).
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Cons icon
Some children’s charities and other critics warn that a blanket ban could drive children towards less regulated corners of the internet (The Guardian, 9 Mar 2026; Hansard, 9 Mar 2026).
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Use ministerial powers to set targeted age restrictions and rules

What this means

Reject a blanket ban, but pursue age restrictions and service-level controls through strengthened powers and consultation, as described in reporting after the vote.

0 No votes yet
👍1 pro
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Pro icon
Reporting indicates this route could enable age restrictions and tighter controls without adopting an outright ban model (The Guardian, 9 Mar 2026; BMJ, 10 Mar 2026).
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Prioritise feature-level regulation over access bans

What this means

Focus on regulating specific “addictive” design features (for example autoplay) rather than banning under-16 access, aligning with proposals discussed as alternatives to a full ban.

0 No votes yet
👍1 pro
Marino avatar
Pro icon
The post-vote debate highlights regulating addictive features like autoplay as a policy lever that could be used even without a full ban (The Guardian, 9 Mar 2026).

Set formal age restrictions on social media services

Prioritise age restrictions as the core tool, as described as a likely next step even after MPs rejected the under-16 ban.

0 No votes yet

Measures aimed at limiting children’s VPN workarounds

Prioritise steps that address VPN circumvention, which is discussed in coverage of the government’s alternative approach.

0 No votes yet

Regulate “addictive” features (e.g., autoplay)

Prioritise restrictions on specific engagement-driving product features, including autoplay, cited in reporting as part of the policy debate.

0 No votes yet

Legislate immediately (ban or restrictions now)

Move quickly with primary legislation rather than waiting for a longer consultation-led path, reflecting the criticism in coverage that government action risks delay.

0 No votes yet

Proceed via consultation first, then implement restrictions

Follow the path described in post-vote reporting: consultation to shape what restrictions are feasible and proportionate before implementation.

0 No votes yet

Sources

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