The government says it is protecting children.
Britain is no longer just talking about tightening online rules for teenagers.
It is now actively testing what digital restriction looks like inside the home.
The government announced that 300 teenagers and their parents across all four nations of the UK will take part in a six-week pilot testing four different interventions: disabling selected social media apps, overnight curfews, screen-time limits of two hours, and a combination of all three. The trial is running alongside a national consultation that closes on 26 May 2026.
That matters because this is not just another online safety headline.
This is the state moving one step closer to deciding not only what platforms must do, but how families should manage digital life at home. Officially, ministers are presenting the pilot as evidence-gathering. The consultation says there is currently no minimum legal age for accessing social media in the UK, and that stronger enforcement or even a legal minimum age of at least 13 is one of the options on the table.
So yes, there is a factual child-safety case here.
The government points to evidence that younger children are already using services that are meant to be restricted, and cites Ofcom data showing widespread use of social media among 10 to 12-year-olds. The broader political backdrop is the Online Safety Act, plus growing concern about harmful content, addictive design and the mental-health impact of constant online exposure. Parliament has also been debating tougher age restrictions and additional protections for children online.
But this is where the opinion side kicks in.
There is a big difference between regulating platforms and normalising digital curfews in private homes. One is about forcing tech companies to build safer systems. The other starts edging into a model where government policy shapes everyday domestic behaviour. That is a much bigger cultural shift than the phrase “online safety” makes it sound, and that is why this trial feels politically loaded.
A social media ban for teenagers can be sold as obvious common sense because it hits a raw nerve with parents already worried about screen addiction, sexualised content, bullying, self-harm content and algorithmic rabbit holes. But once the state starts piloting bans, curfews and time limits inside family life, it is no longer just addressing platform risk. It is testing public appetite for a more interventionist digital state.