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Friday 6 February 2026 08:02

Why Italy Is Taking a Softer Line on Social Media Limits for Minors

Italy and Social Media Limits for Minors: Why Rome Is Taking a Softer Line Than Other Countries  While several countries are moving toward strict bans or tough limits on minors’ access to social media, Italy is so far choosing a far more cautious approach. As governments around the world rethink how to protect children online, Rome’s reluctance to impose hard age limits is becoming increasingly noticeable. Italy’s current position Under Italian law, children can legally access social media platforms from the age of 14, in line with the flexibility allowed by the EU’s GDPR framework. While the regulation sets 16 as the default age for digital consent, member states can lower it to 13. Italy opted for 14 and has, so far, resisted calls for a blanket ban or a sharp increase in the minimum age. There have been political discussions and draft proposals, including suggestions to raise the threshold to 15 or introduce stronger age-verification systems, but none have yet translated into binding legislation. In practice, access is still largely regulated by platform self-declaration, a system widely criticised as ineffective. What other countries are doing Elsewhere, governments are taking a much firmer stance. Australia has adopted one of the toughest approaches, approving legislation that bans access to social media for users under 16 and places the burden of age verification squarely on platforms. France has approved a law that will progressively restrict access to social networks for under-15s, introducing mandatory and verified parental consent. Spain is moving in a similar direction, with announced plans to raise the minimum age and tighten identity checks. At EU level, the debate is also shifting. The European Parliament has backed non-binding resolutions calling for a minimum age of 16 for social media access and stronger, standardised age-verification systems across member states. The common thread is clear: many governments now see social media not just as a communication tool, but as a public health and child-protection issue.  Why Italy is holding back Italy’s more cautious approach reflects a mix of political, cultural and practical concerns. First, enforcement remains a major problem. A strict ban without robust, privacy-compliant age-verification systems risks being symbolic rather than effective. Italian policymakers have repeatedly warned against laws that are easy to bypass and hard to police. Second, there is a strong emphasis on education over prohibition. Many experts and institutions argue that digital literacy, parental involvement and platform responsibility are more sustainable than outright bans, especially for teenagers whose social lives increasingly exist online. Finally, Italy tends to move within a European consensus, rather than acting unilaterally. With EU rules such as the Digital Services Act still being implemented, Rome appears reluctant to introduce national measures that could later clash with common European standards. The criticism Critics argue that this “soft” approach leaves minors exposed. Studies linking heavy social media use to anxiety, addiction and reduced wellbeing are often cited, as are high-profile cases involving online challenges, harassment and harmful content.  They also point out that the current system is largely fictional: children under 14 routinely access platforms by entering a false date of birth, while companies face few real consequences. From this perspective, Italy risks falling behind a broader international shift toward stronger child-protection rules. A choice that cannot be postponed forever   Italy now faces a strategic question: continue to rely on education and light regulation, or align itself with countries opting for stricter limits and clearer bans. The issue goes beyond age thresholds. It touches on how much responsibility should lie with families, how much with platforms, and how much with the state. As other countries redraw the boundaries of childhood and digital life, Italy’s hesitation may soon become a decision in itself.  For now, Rome is choosing caution. But as international pressure grows and European rules evolve, that position may not remain sustainable for long.

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read the news on Wanted in Rome - News in Italy - Rome's local English news



While several countries are moving toward strict bans or tough limits on minors’ access to social media, Italy is so far choosing a far more cautious approach. As governments around the world rethink how to protect children online, Rome’s reluctance to impose hard age limits is becoming increasingly noticeable.  Under Italian law, children can legally access social media platforms from the age of 14, in line with the flexibility allowed by the EU’s GDPR framework. While the regulation sets 16 as the default age for digital consent, member states can lower it to 13. Italy opted for 14 and has, so far, resisted calls for a blanket ban or a sharp increase in the minimum age. There have been political discussions and draft proposals, including suggestions to raise the threshold to 15 or introduce stronger age-verification systems, but none have yet translated into binding legislation. In practice, access is still largely regulated by platform self-declaration, a system widely criticised as ineffective. Elsewhere, governments are taking a much firmer stance. Australia has adopted one of the toughest approaches, approving legislation that bans access to social media for users under 16 and places the burden of age verification squarely on platforms. France has approved a law that will progressively restrict access to social networks for under-15s, introducing mandatory and verified parental consent. Spain is moving in a similar direction, with announced plans to raise the minimum age and tighten identity checks. At EU level, the debate is also shifting. The European Parliament has backed non-binding resolutions calling for a minimum age of 16 for social media access and stronger, standardised age-verification systems across member states. The common thread is clear: many governments now see social media not just as a communication tool, but as a public health and child-protection issue.  Italy’s more cautious approach reflects a mix of political, cultural and practical concerns. First, enforcement remains a major problem. A strict ban without robust, privacy-compliant age-verification systems risks being symbolic rather than effective. Italian policymakers have repeatedly warned against laws that are easy to bypass and hard to police. Second, there is a strong emphasis on education over prohibition. Many experts and institutions argue that digital literacy, parental involvement and platform responsibility are more sustainable than outright bans, especially for teenagers whose social lives increasingly exist online. Finally, Italy tends to move within a European consensus, rather than acting unilaterally. With EU rules such as the Digital Services Act still being implemented, Rome appears reluctant to introduce national measures that could later clash with common European standards. Critics argue that this “soft” approach leaves minors exposed. Studies linking heavy social media use to anxiety, addiction and reduced wellbeing are often cited, as are high-profile cases involving online challenges, harassment and harmful content.  They also point out that the current system is largely fictional: children under 14 routinely access platforms by entering a false date of birth, while companies face few real consequences. From this perspective, Italy risks falling behind a broader international shift toward stronger child-protection rules.   Italy now faces a strategic question: continue to rely on education and light regulation, or align itself with countries opting for stricter limits and clearer bans. The issue goes beyond age thresholds. It touches on how much responsibility should lie with families, how much with platforms, and how much with the state. As other countries redraw the boundaries of childhood and digital life, Italy’s hesitation may soon become a decision in itself.  For now, Rome is choosing caution. But as international pressure grows and European rules evolve, that position may not remain sustainable for long.
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