Australia to double fines for under-16 social media ban violations
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Australian government has announced plans to double the maximum penalty for technology companies that fail to enforce the country's ban on social media use by children under 16, with the fine set to rise from A$49.5 million to A$99 million (approximately USD 68.3 million). Prime Minister Anthony Albanese confirmed the move in a statement on Saturday, 28 June 2025, saying tech platforms are not doing enough to comply with the landmark law.
What the Government Has Proposed
Albanese said the government will introduce legislation to the federal parliament that doubles the maximum civil penalty for non-compliant social media platforms. The proposed changes would also grant the government's eSafety Commissioner stronger powers to compel platforms to produce evidence of the steps they are taking to block underage users.
'There are still too many children on social media,' Albanese said. 'These changes reflect the seriousness with which we take any failure by social media companies to comply with our world-leading law.'
According to reports, the government intends to legislate the changes before the federal parliament's annual winter break, which begins on Thursday.
The Law and Its Limited Early Impact
Australia's Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act 2024 came into effect in December 2025, making the country the first in the world to impose a statutory minimum age of 16 for social media use. Major platforms — including TikTok, X, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Snapchat — are required to take reasonable steps to block underage account holders.
However, a study published on Thursday in the British Medical Journal by researchers at Australia's University of Newcastle (UON) found the law's early impact has been limited. The UON-led study tracked 408 adolescents aged 12 to 17 before and three months after the law took effect, and found that more than 85 per cent of children under 16 reported still using social media on restricted platforms.
How Children Are Bypassing the Ban
Researchers found that minors are accessing platforms through their own accounts, as well as through alternative or shared accounts. Around two-thirds of respondents reported encountering age verification measures — most commonly self-declared age checks or photo-based verification — suggesting that current enforcement mechanisms are relatively easy to circumvent.
This comes amid growing global debate about the effectiveness of age-gating on social media, with regulators in several countries watching Australia's experiment closely as a potential legislative model.
What Happens Next
The proposed legislation is expected to be tabled in parliament before the winter recess. If passed, platforms that fail to prevent under-16s from accessing their services could face fines nearly double the current ceiling. The strengthened powers for the eSafety Commissioner would also mark a significant escalation in the government's enforcement toolkit, shifting the burden of proof more firmly onto the platforms themselves.