Australia’s Groundbreaking Social Media Minimum Age Legislation Shows Limited Immediate Impact on Under-16 Usage, Early Study Reveals
In a world-first policy move, Australia enacted the Social Media Minimum Age Act in December 2025, mandating that major platforms such as TikTok, X, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Snapchat implement reasonable measures to prevent adolescents under 16 from creating accounts. This legislation emerged amid intensifying global concerns linking adolescent social media consumption to mental health challenges and wellbeing disturbances. However, an early observational study published in The BMJ reveals minimal evidence of immediate reductions in social media use among under-16 users following the law’s introduction.
The researchers conducted a longitudinal survey analyzing the digital behaviors of 408 Australian adolescents aged 12 to 17, interviewing participants just prior to the Act’s enforcement and then again three months later. The study uniquely combined self-reported frequency data, average daily time spent on platforms, and the strategies employed by youths to navigate or subvert age-related restrictions, thus providing a nuanced early portrait of policy impact in real-world contexts.
Surprisingly, over 85% of participants under 16 reported continued social media use on the regulated platforms at the three-month follow-up, with more than half accessing these services through personal accounts. Although platform age verification mechanisms were utilized—most commonly via self-declared birthdates or selfie uploads—approximately two-thirds of under-16 users still passed through these portals. This suggests that current automated or procedural verification steps are insufficient in curbing adolescent access, illuminating a critical technological and regulatory gap.
Moreover, the study uncovered deliberate circumvention tactics among younger users. Approximately 15 to 19% confessed to operating ‘fake’ social media accounts with falsified age information, and 6 to 11% reported accessing platforms using private or incognito browser modes to avoid detection and restrictions. These behavioral adaptations underscore the limitations of policy enforcement when confronted with tech-savvy youth and illuminate the need for enhanced, perhaps biometric or multi-factor authentication systems that more accurately verify age while respecting privacy.
The frequency of daily social media engagement revealed a complex age-dependent pattern. Among 12-13 year olds, daily use remained stable across the study timeframe. Slight reductions in daily usage were noted for the 14-15 cohort, dropping from 78% at baseline to 69% at follow-up, whereas users above 16 demonstrated increased daily engagement, rising from 80% to 89%. Correspondingly, time spent daily on these platforms decreased modestly among 14-15 year olds, but remained stable among other age groups, indicating that the Act had a negligible broad-scale effect on usage intensity shortly after implementation.
It is crucial to contextualize these findings within the observational design of the study. The sample was geographically constrained to New South Wales and relied heavily on self-report measures, factors which may introduce bias and limit generalizability to the wider Australian adolescent population or other international settings. Nonetheless, the robustness of findings was supported by sensitivity analyses that accounted for variations in demographic variables such as gender and cultural diversity, lending credence to the observed trends.
This early evidence challenges assumptions about the immediate efficacy of legislative interventions in digital behavior modification among adolescents, amplifying calls for enhanced verification technology, sustained policy enforcement, and complementary educational strategies. The authors highlight that legislative actions typically require extended timelines to manifest measurable societal shifts and advocate for iterative policymaking based on accumulating empirical data and stakeholder feedback.
In an accompanying editorial, Dr. Amrit Kaur Purba stresses the importance of differentiating between policy design, enforcement fidelity, and actual effectiveness. Widespread circumvention and low compliance rates make it difficult to gauge the inherent potential of the Social Media Minimum Age Act absent improvements in on-the-ground implementation. The editorial underscores the necessity to study collateral effects such as platform migration—where teens might shift to unregulated or emerging apps—and broader psychosocial outcomes extending beyond mental health metrics.
Looking ahead, future research agendas must embrace systems thinking approaches to monitor how adolescent populations adapt dynamically over time to age-based social media restrictions. This entails longitudinal multi-platform surveillance, assessment of unintended behavioral and social consequences, and integrated evaluation of policy impact, technological innovation adoption, and cultural shifts in digital literacy and parental mediation. Only through such comprehensive methodologies can policymakers safeguard adolescent wellbeing effectively in the rapidly evolving digital ecosystem.
As multiple governments across Europe, North America, and elsewhere contemplate analogous social media age restrictions, Australia’s pioneering yet challenging journey offers critical empirical insights. Real-world evidence such as this early study informs the global debate often dominated by conjecture, emphasizing that policy effectiveness hinges not only on enactment but on precise, enforceable, and adaptable implementation strategies that engage young users’ motivations and behaviors.
The study’s authors recommend legislative refinement in collaboration with platform developers to strengthen verification measures, possibly integrating advanced identity authentication technologies while safeguarding user privacy and access equity. Additionally, accompanying interventions—including digital literacy programs, parental engagement, and mental health resources—are essential to complement legal frameworks and foster resilient, informed adolescent digital citizenship.
Ultimately, while the Social Media Minimum Age Act represents a bold stride toward protecting youth in the digital age, these early findings highlight the complexity of regulating immersive technologies among motivated adolescent populations. The journey toward demonstrable reductions in underage social media usage and the promotion of healthier online environments remains lengthy and dependent on multidisciplinary, evidence-driven policies positioned within broader societal and technological contexts.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Assessing the early effects of Australia’s ‘Social Media Minimum Age Act’ on adolescent social media use
News Publication Date: 24 June 2026
Web References: 10.1136/bmj-2026-363695
Keywords: Social media, Adolescents, Age verification, Policy implementation, Digital behavior, Underage use, Social Media Minimum Age Act, Platform circumvention, Adolescent mental health, Legislative impact, Digital literacy, Identity authentication

