Includes Cyprus section (EU age verification pilot, proposed age limit increase). Updates countries.json with Greece, Indonesia, Cyprus entries. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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| Greece to Ban Social Media for Under-15s from 2027 | 2026-04-08 | 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. |
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Agiliton | greece-social-media-ban-under-15 | 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:
- 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:
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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.
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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.
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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. For background on how social media platforms are designed to be addictive, read our article on tech companies and the addiction business model.