YouTube cut off: Australian teens are losing logins under new age law


What you need to know

  • YouTube will auto-sign out all Australian users under 16 starting December 10 to comply with the new Social Media Minimum Age Act.
  • Teenagers lose all account features: subscriptions, commenting, uploading, and parental controls.
  • Google warns the ban will make teens less safe, while the Australian government says that’s YouTube’s problem to solve.

After weeks of discussions between Silicon Valley and Canberra, YouTube has confirmed it will comply with Australia’s social media ban on teens. Starting December 10, the platform will automatically sign out users under 16. It’s a fundamental change to how the platform works for young people, and Google isn’t hiding its frustration.

What was initially billed as a crackdown on social media apps has now expanded to include YouTube, despite Google’s insistence that YouTube doesn’t operate like Facebook, Instagram, or Snapchat. But regulators ruled otherwise, and the platform must comply with the Social Media Minimum Age Act.

The timing and scope have caught parents, teens, and creators off guard. For many Australians, YouTube was more than just a social feed. It offered entertainment, homework help, and a space for creators. Now, all those features disappear as soon as a user is found to be under 16.

YouTube pop-up message telling teens in Australia they need to be 16 or older to use the platform

(Image credit: Google)

Instead, they will be pushed into a stripped-down YouTube experience where they can watch videos but can’t like, subscribe, comment, or upload. Parental controls disappear entirely because YouTube’s supervision tools only work when a user is signed in.

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