Australia’s online safety watchdog, eSafety, says it will monitor teenagers’ well-being to evaluate the impact of a newly enacted law that bans users under 16 from maintaining or creating accounts on major social-media platforms. The tracking will include metrics such as sleep habits, social activity, time spent on sports or reading, medication use, and academic performance — aiming to assess whether removing social media access improves mental and physical health outcomes. This follows the December 10, 2025 implementation of the ban under the Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act 2024, which forces platforms to prevent under-16s from signing up or remaining logged in, though under-16s are still allowed to view content when logged out.
Sources: Epoch Times, ABC.net
Key Takeaways
– The new law does not penalize under-16s or their parents — penalties apply only to platforms that fail to block under-16 accounts. Platforms must take “reasonable steps” to age-verify users.
– The follow-up tracking by eSafety and collaborators aims to generate data on real-world impacts, beyond anecdotal or preliminary claims about mental health benefits.
– Experts warn the ban could drive under-16s to migrate to newer, lesser-known apps or unregulated platforms, potentially sidestepping the safeguards and creating unforeseen risks.
In-Depth
Australia’s decision to enforce a minimum social-media age of 16 marks a bold—and controversial—experiment in online regulation. The law, known formally as the Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act 2024, comes after mounting concern over the impact of platforms like Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, X, YouTube, Reddit, and others on youth mental health, social development, and well-being. Beginning December 10, 2025, these platforms are required to ensure that users under 16 cannot maintain or create accounts — or face fines up to A$50 million for non-compliance.
Critics have long argued that social media can foster anxiety, body-image problems, cyberbullying, and addictive behavior among adolescents. Supporters of the ban say removing under-16s from the social-media ecosystem will shield them from harmful content and give them more time for sleep, physical activity, reading, real-world friendships, and study. But until now, much of the argument rested on theory and correlation — not hard data.
That’s where the tracking initiative comes in. The government’s online-safety regulator, eSafety, has said it will monitor a variety of indicators including sleep, social interactions, sports, reading habits, medication use, and academic outcomes, in order to judge whether the ban meaningfully improves teens’ well-being or simply displaces them. A parallel academic effort — the “Connected Minds Study,” led by the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI) and Deakin University — is recruiting 13- to 16-year-olds and their parents to take part in surveys and optional phone-use monitoring before and after the restrictions take hold.
In theory, a ban implemented with follow-up evaluation could yield more than just moral signaling or regulatory posturing; it could produce empirical evidence about the effects of social media on youth development. If the data show improved sleep, better mental health, increased academic performance, or enhanced social connectedness offline — that would give weight to arguments for extended regulation, potentially inspiring similar moves by other countries.
But there are inherent risks and challenges. For one, the policy only targets a limited set of “age-restricted social media platforms.” Messaging apps, games, forums, and emerging social networks fall outside the immediate scope — meaning under-16s may simply migrate to less regulated spaces where moderation is weaker or non-existent. That could make them harder to monitor and protect. Moreover, enforcement depends heavily on platforms’ willingness and ability to implement accurate age verification, which critics argue can either overreach (invading privacy) or underperform (letting determined teens bypass checks).
Then there’s the question of unintended consequences. Restricting access to big, high-profile platforms may lead teens to gather on unregulated or fringe platforms — often with fewer safety features — undermining the original aim. Alternatively, being barred from social media could isolate young people socially, making it harder for them to maintain friendships, especially in a digital-first generation where so much of peer interaction already happens online.
Finally, gauging “well-being” is complex. Improvements in sleep or reduced screen time might tell only part of the story. True emotional health, social satisfaction, and resilience are harder to measure. The metrics captured may not reflect long-term outcomes.
In sum, Australia is undertaking an ambitious social experiment. By coupling legal restriction with empirical tracking, the government hopes to separate myth from reality — to show whether a social-media hiatus actually produces healthier, happier teens. If successful, it may reshape how democracies think about digital childhood. If not, it risks driving youth into darker corners of the Internet, trading one set of harms for another.

