--- title: "Greece to Ban Social Media for Under-15s from 2027" date: 2026-04-08 description: "Greece announces a ban on social media for children under 15, joining a growing global movement to protect young people online. The ban takes effect January 2027." tags: ["child protection", "legislation", "Greece", "social media ban", "age verification", "Europe", "Cyprus"] categories: ["legislation"] author: "Agiliton" slug: "greece-social-media-ban-under-15" translationKey: "greece-social-media-ban" --- 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. ## What Exactly Is Being Banned? Starting **January 1, 2027**, children under 15 in Greece will no longer be allowed to use major social media platforms. Here is what is affected: **Banned platforms:** - Facebook - Instagram - TikTok - Snapchat - X (formerly Twitter) - Other platforms that rely on "endless scrolling" and user-generated content **Still allowed:** - WhatsApp, Messenger, Viber (messaging apps) - YouTube (video platform) - Video calling apps The distinction is clear: apps designed for communication stay, while platforms built around addictive feeds and algorithms get restricted. ## Why Is Greece Doing This? The Greek government cited three main reasons: 1. **Mental health concerns** — Research from Imperial College London (2026) found that children using social media more than 3 hours daily are significantly more likely to develop depression and anxiety. 2. **Addictive design** — Social media algorithms are specifically engineered to keep users scrolling. Prime Minister Mitsotakis called out "the addictive design of some apps" and their "profit-driven" algorithms. 3. **Sleep problems** — Multiple studies link heavy social media use among young people to poor sleep quality, which affects school performance, mood, and physical health. ## Greece Joins a Growing Global Wave Greece is not alone. Countries around the world are taking similar steps: | Country | Age Limit | Status | Key Detail | |---|---|---|---| | **Australia** | Under 16 | Enforced (Dec 2025) | First country globally; fines up to AUD 49.5M | | **Indonesia** | Under 16 | Enforced (Mar 2026) | Companies summoned for non-compliance | | **France** | Under 15 | Passed (Apr 2026) | Arcom regulator blacklist approach | | **Greece** | Under 15 | Announced (Apr 2026) | Takes effect Jan 2027 | | **Norway** | Under 15 | Proposed | Bill in progress | ## Does It Actually Work? The Australian Experience Australia became the first country to enforce a social media ban for under-16s in December 2025. Four months later, the results are mixed: studies suggest that around **70% of children** still found ways to access banned platforms. This raises an important question: can bans really work when determined teenagers know how to get around restrictions? Critics argue that bans push young people to less-safe corners of the internet rather than keeping them off it entirely. Two Australian teenagers — Noah Jones and Macy Neyland — are even challenging the ban in court, arguing it disregards children's rights. ## The Age Verification Problem To enforce a ban, platforms need to know how old their users are. But verifying age online is surprisingly difficult: - **Face scans** — AI can estimate age from photos, but raises serious privacy concerns. Who stores this biometric data? - **ID checks** — Effective, but many young people do not have government-issued ID - **Privacy paradox** — Banning social media to protect children's privacy requires collecting even more personal data to verify ages Greece, along with France, Denmark, Italy, Spain, and Cyprus, is part of an **EU age verification pilot program** testing solutions that link to national population registries. ## What About Cyprus? As an EU member state and close neighbor of Greece, Cyprus is watching closely: - **Current age limit**: 14 (under GDPR framework) - **Active proposal**: A bill to raise the minimum age from 14 to 16 is being debated in the House Legal Affairs Committee - **EU presidency priority**: President Nikos Christodoulides has declared child digital safety a priority for Cyprus's 2026 EU presidency - **Joint letter**: Cyprus co-signed a letter with France, Greece, Spain, Denmark, and Slovenia calling for an EU-wide "digital age of majority" - **Age verification pilot**: Cyprus is one of six EU countries testing age verification technology Cyprus has also introduced a separate bill to make **digital citizenship education mandatory** in all schools — teaching young people to use the internet safely rather than simply banning them from parts of it. ## Both Sides of the Debate **In favor of bans:** - Protects children from addictive algorithms designed to maximize engagement - Reduces exposure to harmful content, cyberbullying, and unrealistic comparisons - Gives children time to develop emotional resilience before entering social media **Against bans:** - Difficult to enforce (Australia's 70% circumvention rate) - Removes platforms young people use for support communities, creativity, and civic engagement - Age verification creates new privacy risks - May push teens to unregulated or underground platforms Amnesty International has called social media bans an "ineffective quick-fix," while UNICEF warns that age-based restrictions alone will not keep children safe. ## What This Means for Families - **In Greece**: From January 2027, platforms will be legally required to prevent under-15s from accessing social media. Parents will not need to rely solely on parental controls. - **Across Europe**: Greece's decision adds momentum to the EU-wide push. More countries are likely to follow. - **Everywhere**: Regardless of local laws, families can discuss healthy screen time habits and the difference between messaging friends and endlessly scrolling feeds. ## What Happens Next Greece will draft the detailed legislation in the coming months, with the ban scheduled to take effect on **January 1, 2027**. The key open questions are how age verification will work in practice and what penalties platforms will face for non-compliance. --- *For a broader look at child protection laws worldwide, see our [global overview](/en/child-protection-laws-2026-global-overview/). For background on how social media platforms are designed to be addictive, read our article on [tech companies and the addiction business model](/en/tech-companies-addiction-business-model/).*