EU Considers Delaying Social Media Access for Children Amid Growing Concerns Over Addictive Design
The **European Commission** is weighing a proposal to delay social media access for children, signaling a potential shift in the EU's approach to online safety. President **Ursula von der Leyen** highlighted the need to address addictive design features and protect young users from harmful content.
The president of the **European Commission** said Tuesday that she believes Europe must delay social media access for children, a significant new signal that the **European Union** could soon move forward with a plan that limits young teenagersβ use of the platforms.
An expert panel appointed by the commission will be releasing recommendations in the coming weeks for how the EU can do more to safeguard children online. Commission head **Ursula von der Leyen** said she expects their work could lead to a legal proposal delaying the age at which children can access social media as soon as this summer.
The **European Commission** only has the power to recommend legislation, so Europeβs parliament will have to pass a law for limits to be put into place. Still, experts said the comments are a sign of increased support for such restrictions.
βWe are witnessing the lightning speed at which technology is advancing β and how it penetrates every corner of childhood and adolescence,β **von der Leyen** said at a conference in Copenhagen. βAnd the discussions about a minimum age for social media can no longer be ignored.β
Several European countries, including Spain, Greece, Norway, France, Denmark, Turkey and the Netherlands, have said they are considering or are implementing age verification protocols to restrict young teens from accessing social media platforms.
### Focus on Addictive Design
The speech also focused on what **von der Leyen** sees as addictive design features embedded in the platforms.
The forthcoming Digital Fairness Act (DFA) will βtarget addictive and harmful design practices [like]... attention capture, complex contracts, subscription traps, etcetera,β **von der Leyen** said.
βIn Europe, safety must be there from the start, not added as an afterthought.β
The DFA is expected to be unveiled later this year. It is designed to expand on the existing Digital Services Act (DSA), which targets social media companies for hosting harmful and unlawful content.
The commission is currently investigating **Meta** for possible DSA violations, including for not doing enough to protect minors and using addictive design features. It has also launched a DSA probe into **xAI**βs Grok nudification tool.
The presidentβs remarks about the bloc pursuing social media limits for young teenagers could be meant to highlight for member states that the **European Commission** is serious about taking action, experts said.
βThe commission was seeing the debate percolate across a number of member states and so having a commission level action is one way to say, βOkay, member states, just hold your horses. Let's do something at EU level to not have fragmentation,ββ said **Isabelle Roccia**, the managing director for Europe at the **IAPP**.
βThat was significantβ¦ because she was the messenger and because it's a signal to member states that the EU level is seizing the issue.β

