India is considering age-based restrictions on social media as state governments and parliament members weigh potential bans for users under 16.
The discussion has gained urgency after Australia enacted a similar law in December, requiring platforms to prevent minors from creating accounts, and France, the UK, Austria, Poland, Denmark, and Greece are exploring comparable measures.
In India, the Economic Survey highlighted risks of social media addiction, citing links to anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, and cyberbullying, especially among users aged 15–24. Three recent suicides in Ghaziabad, potentially linked to online content, have further fueled the debate.
A private member’s bill in Andhra Pradesh aims to legally compel platforms like Instagram, YouTube, and Snapchat to block under-16 accounts and penalize noncompliance. However, experts warn enforcement would be extremely difficult in India’s vast and diverse digital landscape. With over 950 million internet users, 1.16 billion mobile connections, and a 43% VPN adoption rate, teens could easily bypass restrictions using shared accounts or virtual private networks.
Apar Gupta of the Internet Freedom Foundation and other digital rights advocates suggest broader solutions—such as regulating addictive platform features, restricting child profiling, funding research, and empowering independent regulators—rather than blanket bans.
Teens themselves are skeptical about enforcement. Fifteen-year-old Aarav Gupta from Delhi noted that social media is central to planning daily activities and that restrictions could be circumvented easily, while 14-year-old Priya Khullar from Bhopal said life without social media is hard to imagine and that any ban could be bypassed.
As India debates its approach, policymakers must balance child protection, digital rights, and practical enforcement challenges in the world’s second-largest smartphone market.