Australia and Malaysia Follow the Same Path: Under-16 Social Media Ban Makes Age Verification Essential

Australia and Malaysia are banning social media for users under 16, making eKYC-based age verification mandatory. See how age authentication is becoming the new global standard.
Australia and Malaysia Follow the Same Path: Under-16 Social Media Ban Makes Age Verification Essential

Malaysia to Block Under-16 Social Media Accounts Starting 2026

As Australia becomes the world’s first country to completely ban social media use for teenagers under 16, Malaysia is preparing to introduce a similar regulation signaling a major shift in global digital policy. What stands out is that this is no longer just about “age limits,” but about how governments plan to enforce them through mandatory electronic Know Your Customer (eKYC) systems.

Malaysia’s Ministry of Communications announced that from January 1, 2026, users under 16 will be prohibited from creating or using social media accounts under the new Online Safety Act.
Minister Fahmi Fadzil explained that the minimum age has been raised from the previously discussed 13 to 16, and that all platforms will be required to implement eKYC-based age verification.

The government is reviewing methods that use official documents such as passports and MyDigital ID to verify real age. Social media platforms must complete technical and operational preparations by 2026.

Australia Becomes First Country to Fully Enforce the Rule

Australia passed the related bill in November 2024 and will become the first country in the world to ban major social media platforms for users under 16 starting December 10, 2025.
Platforms affected include Reddit, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, Snapchat, Threads, and YouTube.

Malaysia has stated that it will closely study Australia’s implementation to design the most effective age-verification system for its own environment.

From “Age Limit” to “Age Verification”

The core of these new policies is not simply saying “under 16 is not allowed,” but ensuring that platforms can actually prove whether a user is 16 or older.

Until now, most platforms relied on users self-entering their birthdate, a system easily bypassed with false information. Governments now recognize this limitation and are shifting toward mandatory government-grade eKYC using official IDs.

Why Governments Are Acting: Youth Safety and Cybercrime

Malaysia’s strong stance is driven by growing concern over youth exposure to harmful content and online crime.
A recent case in which four teenagers committed a sexual crime and uploaded the footage online caused major public outrage and accelerated policy action.

The government describes the new regulation not as simple restriction, but as part of a broader online safety strategy that includes parental responsibility, reduced screen time, and stronger platform accountability.

Impact on Platforms and the Identity Industry

Australia and Malaysia are sending a clear signal to the world:
Age limits must be technically enforceable.

This will likely lead to:

  • Rapid adoption of eKYC by social media platforms

  • Increased demand for ID-based and biometric age verification technologies

  • Greater debate over privacy, accuracy, and data protection

As youth protection meets real-world operations, age verification is becoming a central issue in global digital policy.

The Era of “No Social Media Under 16” Has Begun

What started as a policy promise “we will protect children” has become a technical challenge “How do we actually stop underage users?”

The answer is moving away from checkboxes and toward trust-based, eKYC-driven age verification systems where technology must now prove what policy declares.

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