22 May 2026
The National Police Chiefs' Council and the National Crime Agency are unequivocal in their view that the online environment, as it currently exists, is not safe for children under 16.
The National Police Chiefs' Council and the National Crime Agency are unequivocal in their view that the online environment, as it currently exists, is not safe for children under 16.
We are calling for restrictions on under-16s' access to online platforms whose design features enable criminals to harm children. This means not just social media, but gaming apps, messaging apps and AI chatbots too; any platform with features that offenders exploit.
Crucially, we are not calling for a blanket ban based on app names. We are calling for restrictions based on the specific features that create risk:
These features are commonly found across a range of well-known messaging, social media, gaming and increasingly AI platforms such as Snapchat, Instagram, Discord, Tiktok, Telegram, Kik, X, Roblox, in addition to operating systems. These are all platforms where our children spend increasing amounts of their time. But this is not an exhaustive list, and not necessarily the highest risk examples. Any platform that includes these features poses a risk, and if they are removed, that risk, and the need for restriction, falls away.
This approach matters for two reasons. First, it follows the risk rather than the platform, closing the loophole that displaces harm from one app to another. Second, it gives technology companies a powerful and immediate incentive to act: remove the dangerous features, and your under-16 users come back. Fail to act, and a significant portion of your customer base is gone; immediately, not after years of regulatory investigation and litigation.
We have been raising the alarm about platform design for years. The evidence is now overwhelming.
There are up to an estimated 840,000 adults in the UK who pose a sexual risk to children. Online platforms, as currently designed, give them industrial-scale access to victims. All of the most popular platforms contain features that, from a law enforcement perspective, are unsafe for children. Algorithms surface children to offenders. Open messaging features allow direct, private contact at scale. Encryption provides cover. And age checks, where they exist at all, are routinely circumvented by children and adults alike.
In 2025, referrals related to child sexual abuse (CSA) from online platforms to the NCA reached almost 100,000. Across the UK, we are arresting around 1,000 offenders and safeguarding approximately 1,200 children every month. Policing is more joined-up and more tenacious in tackling CSA than ever, yet we are still not keeping pace with the speed and reach that platform design hands to criminals.
The harms are severe. We are talking about sexual grooming, coercion and blackmail; children being manipulated into producing images of their own abuse; offenders planning to meet children in person. Social media also enables drug distribution, fraud targeting young people, and the recruitment of children as money mules.
Every month we delay, more children are harmed.
A blanket ban on named apps is blunt and creates perverse incentives: companies face the same consequence whether they make their platforms safe or not. A feature-based restriction is precise and proportionate. It tells companies exactly what they need to change.
The features that most commonly enable harm are well understood, and many are already in Ofcom's sights under the Online Safety Act. But regulatory enforcement through Ofcom means investigations that may take years and fines that companies can absorb. A feature-based age restriction means immediate commercial consequences. That changes the calculus entirely.
We would hope that this approach incentivises companies to build a genuinely safe online world for children; one where, in time, restrictions could be relaxed or more narrowly targeted. But the current trajectory is not fast enough, and we cannot keep asking children to wait.
We believe any restrictions must be clear to families, fair to children, and focused on changing the highest-risk features. As the UK's lead agency for serious and organised crime, and the body responsible for national policing coordination, we are recommending that Ministers act on the following:
The NCA's CEOP Education team seeks to protect children and young people from the threat of online CSA before it occurs, building protective skills and providing a direct reporting route through the CEOP Safety Centre. Any restriction on online access is intended to complement, not replace, this work, or the work of child rights organisations, mental health professionals, educators and civil society. These partners approach this issue from the perspective of children's wellbeing, rights and digital ethics. Our perspective is distinct, but complementary: we see it through the lens of the harm that is happening now, at scale, and the offenders who are making it happen.
Restricting under-16s' access to the highest-risk online environments is not about blaming young people or limiting their futures. It is about reducing avoidable harm while safer spaces are built; spaces where children can engage online with genuine protection, not just the appearance of it.
Communications office
By phone: 0800 538 5058
By email: press.office@npcc.police.uk