Published: 29 April 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
The European Union has found Meta in preliminary breach of its digital regulations over claims that the company has failed to adequately prevent children under the age of 13 from accessing its Facebook and Instagram platforms. The findings, issued after a nearly two-year investigation, mark one of the most significant regulatory challenges yet faced by the US tech giant in Europe.
According to the European Commission, Meta has not implemented effective safeguards required under the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), which obliges major online platforms to actively identify and reduce risks associated with their services. Regulators concluded that despite the company’s stated minimum age requirement of 13, underage users were still able to access its platforms with relative ease, raising concerns about enforcement and child safety online.
The commission’s preliminary assessment stated that Meta had not taken sufficient steps to ensure compliance with its own terms of service. Officials noted that children under 13 could simply enter false birthdates when registering accounts, with no robust verification system in place to prevent access. The lack of effective age-check mechanisms was highlighted as a key failure in safeguarding younger users from exposure to social media content.
Another concern raised by EU regulators was the effectiveness of Meta’s reporting tools for identifying underage users. According to the findings, the system in place was considered difficult to use and lacked proper follow-up procedures, meaning reported accounts were not always removed or reviewed promptly. This, the commission said, allowed some underage users to continue accessing Facebook and Instagram despite violating platform rules.
The European Commission stressed that the findings are preliminary and do not represent a final legal decision. Meta now has the opportunity to review the evidence, respond formally and present its defence before any final ruling is made. However, if the company is ultimately found to be in violation of the DSA, it could face fines of up to 6% of its global annual revenue, a penalty that could amount to billions of dollars given Meta’s reported earnings.
Meta, which reported revenue exceeding $200 billion in 2025, strongly rejected the preliminary conclusions. A company spokesperson said Facebook and Instagram are designed for users aged 13 and above and insisted that systems are already in place to detect and remove underage accounts. The company argued that age verification remains a widespread challenge across the technology sector and requires coordinated industry-wide solutions rather than isolated enforcement actions.
The spokesperson also stated that Meta continues to invest in technologies aimed at identifying and removing accounts belonging to underage users. The company said it is engaging constructively with European regulators and expects to introduce additional safety measures in the near future.
The case comes amid growing concern across Europe over children’s exposure to social media platforms. Governments in several countries have begun considering stricter regulations. Spain has proposed banning social media access for children under 16, while France has already supported similar restrictions for users under 15. In the United Kingdom, policymakers are also reviewing potential age-based or functionality-based restrictions for users under 16.
European officials have increasingly warned about what they describe as the risks posed by large technology platforms to young users. Concerns include exposure to harmful content, excessive screen time and algorithm-driven recommendation systems that may reinforce negative behavioural patterns. Regulators have pointed to what they describe as “rabbit hole” effects, where recommendation algorithms continuously feed users similar or increasingly extreme content, potentially affecting mental well-being.
The Digital Services Act, which came into force to regulate major online platforms operating within the European Union, places strict obligations on companies like Meta to actively assess and mitigate such risks. Officials argue that compliance cannot be limited to written policies but must involve effective, enforceable action that protects users in practice, particularly vulnerable groups such as children.
Henna Virkkunen, a senior EU official involved in the investigation, stated that platforms must do more than publish age restrictions; they must ensure those rules are meaningfully enforced. She emphasised that safeguarding children online is a central objective of the legislation and that companies operating in the EU are expected to take proactive responsibility for user safety.
The investigation into Meta was launched in May 2024 and forms part of a broader regulatory effort targeting large technology firms under the DSA framework. While the child safety issue represents one major strand of the inquiry, regulators are also examining whether Meta is doing enough to protect users’ physical and mental health more broadly, particularly younger audiences.
Meta has previously defended its approach to youth safety, stating that it has developed dozens of tools and policies over the past decade aimed at improving online protection for minors. The company has also introduced features designed to encourage healthier usage patterns among teenagers and to limit exposure to potentially harmful content.
Despite these measures, EU regulators remain concerned that enforcement gaps continue to exist. The outcome of the investigation could have significant implications not only for Meta but for the wider technology sector, as governments across Europe and beyond move toward stricter digital governance frameworks.
For now, the case remains ongoing, but it highlights the increasing pressure on global tech companies to balance platform growth with stronger protections for younger users in an increasingly complex digital environment.



























































































