Preparing Teens for Under-16 Social Media Ban
- Kirra Pendergast
- Aug 8
- 3 min read
Updated: Aug 9

If you would like to book a 45-minute "Preparing for the 16+ Age Delay Webinar and Q&A" with Kirra Pendergast for your school community, please book today, as places are limited. $597+GST Resources provided. Hit reply to this email.
Why This Matters
In response to growing global concerns about online harms, TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook, Reddit, X/Twitter, and YouTube will need to have age-verification measures to restrict access for users under 16 from accessing these platforms in Australia by the end of this year.
Without preparation, teens risk losing access to connections, content, or communities they love, with little notice.
This cheat sheet helps you plan with teens, not just for them, preserving their agency, digital memory, and online wellbeing.
1. Map Their Online World
Sit down with your teen or your class and suggest they do a quick audit of their digital presence: What platforms do they use daily? Which chats, groups, or creators are most important to them? What digital spaces help them feel seen, supported, or inspired? Use this as a respectful, non-judgmental starting point.
2. Create Safe, Private Chat Alternatives
Help teens stay connected with trusted friends by:
Creating group chats on age-appropriate platforms with parental visibility. This is a great opportunity to discuss basic of cyber safety again. No strangers, speak up, etc etc.
Setting ground rules together for respectful use (e.g., no screenshots, no forwarding without consent).
Encouraging smaller, opt-in friend circles over large open groups.
3. Back Up Digital Memories
Many teens store important photos, videos, or messages within apps that they might lose access to.
Encourage them to:
Download or screenshot meaningful chats, photos, or creative content.
Create a secure offline folder or shared cloud drive where they can preserve this material.
Treat digital memory like emotional memory—it matters.
4. Follow Creators Safely Off-Platform
If your teen follows supportive influencers or identity-affirming content:
Check if the creator has a newsletter, blog or podcast that’s safe and age-compliant.
Subscribe together, using a parent-controlled email if appropriate.
Encourage them to keep a short list of “good spaces” they want to continue engaging with—safely, responsibly, and with boundaries.
5. Set Up a Family Re-Entry Plan
Prepare for re-entry at 16:
Discuss what "readiness" looks like: emotional maturity, digital literacy, algorithmic literacy, and privacy skills.
Consider using this in-between time to build stronger media literacy habits: fact-checking, blocking/reporting, resisting pressure to overshare.
Use tools like screen agreements or digital literacy check-ins to promote reflection, not restriction.
6. Create a Safe Space to Speak Up
One of the most powerful protections you can offer is an open-door culture at home. Teens need to know they can talk about what they see, feel, or regret online, without fear of punishment or shame.
By normalising conversations around digital stress, peer pressure, and mistakes, you give them the confidence to come to you when it really matters. Make it clear: you’re not here to monitor, you’re here to mentor. As an example, make short car rides device-free so you can talk.
7. Focus on Offline Self-Worth
Helping your teen build a solid sense of identity before they re-enter social platforms at 16 is a massive parenting win. Invest time in:
Offline activities that grow confidence, creativity, and purpose
Encouraging hobbies, peer circles, and community spaces where they feel valued
Conversations that centre on who they are, not how they’re perceived
The stronger their internal compass, the less sway external validation will have when they return to online life.
Support for Neurodivergent Teens
Neurodivergent young people, such as those with autism, ADHD, or sensory processing differences, often form deep attachments to online spaces that feel safe, structured, or interest-aligned. Losing access can feel disorienting, even threatening to their sense of routine or identity.
Support them by:
Pre-warning about possible platform changes well in advance, using clear, non-alarmist language.
Recreate social scenarios offline to rehearse conversations, rebuild friendships, or name emotions they might otherwise bottle up.
Providing structured alternatives: joining a moderated fan community, a special-interest newsletter, or a safe online space with inclusive norms.
Using visual or written planners to help them track online/offline activities.
Respecting that online friendships are real friendships to them, even if you don’t always recognise the format.
Affirming their need for connection, predictability, and control will ease the transition and build trust for future digital decisions.
Watch for Emotional Withdrawal or Shame
Losing access can feel like exclusion, rejection, or punishment.
Be alert to:
Sudden withdrawal or anxiety
Mood changes linked to online disconnection
Feelings of being “left behind” or “cut off”
Respond with empathy, not panic. Remind them this is about age, not failure and that you’re on their team.
If you would like to book a 45-minute "Preparing for the 16+ Age Delay Webinar and Q&A" with Kirra Pendergast for your school community, please book today, as places are limited. $597+GST Resources provided. Hit reply to this email.
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