In the eighteen months after Australia became the first country to ban social media for under-16s, the policy crossed the Atlantic and the English Channel. By May 2026, five European countries had either passed or actively legislated their own variants. France, Greece, Denmark and Cyprus settled on 15 as the cutoff. Turkey landed on 15 too, but with a markedly different enforcement model that has drawn criticism from civil liberties groups.
On the night of April 22, 2026, Turkey’s parliament passed a bill restricting social media for children under 15. The headline reads like the ones from Athens, Nicosia or Paris earlier in the month — another European country drawing an age line for social platforms. The details read very differently.
Unlike the EU’s zero-knowledge approach, Turkey’s law is tightly coupled to the national ID system, adds a one-hour takedown mandate for large platforms, and arrives on top of a parallel draft that would require every adult user to log in with an e-Devlet (national ID) credential. That is why press-freedom groups, law professors and opposition MPs are calling it something other than a child-protection law.
Cyprus has become the latest European country to ban social media for children. On April 16, 2026, President Nikos Christodoulides announced that children under 15 will no longer be allowed to use social media platforms in Cyprus.
The announcement comes just one day after the European Commission declared its age verification app technically ready for deployment — and just eight days after neighboring Greece announced its own under-15 ban.
What Is Being Banned?
The ban targets social media platforms built around user-generated content and algorithmic feeds:
On October 8, 2025, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen opened parliament with a sentence that set the tone for the rest of the year in Europe: “Mobile phones and social media are stealing our children’s childhood.” One month later her coalition had a deal. Denmark’s social media ban for under-15s — with a parental opt-in from age 13 — is now the template several other EU countries are watching most closely.
While France has passed a ban for under-15s and Greece has announced the same for 2027, Germany is still arguing about the number on the door. On April 13, 2026, two contributions landed on the same day from very different directions: the Cologne-based Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft (IW) released its Bildungsmonitor analysis suggesting 13 as a sensible minimum age, and in the taz, Potsdam education researcher Nina Kolleck argued that any age limit — 13, 14, or 16 — is a capitulation to TikTok and Meta if the laws already on the books go unenforced.
Greece has announced it will ban children under 15 from using social media — and the announcement came in an unusual way. On April 8, 2026, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis posted a video on TikTok to announce a ban on… TikTok (and other platforms) for young users.
“We decided to proceed with something difficult but necessary — banning access to social media for children under 15,” the Prime Minister said in his video message.
France is set to become one of the strictest countries in the world when it comes to protecting children from social media. On April 1, 2026, the French Senate approved a bill that would ban children under 15 from using social media platforms — following a similar vote in the National Assembly in January.
What the Senate Voted On
The bill introduces a two-tier system to keep minors off social media: