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TechDogs-"Malaysia Bars Under-16s From Signing Up For Social Media"

Social Media

Malaysia Bars Under-16s From Signing Up For Social Media

By Jemish Sataki

Updated on Mon, Jun 1, 2026

Overall Rating

Malaysia has started blocking children under 16 from registering social media accounts, requiring major platforms to verify user ages through government-issued records as part of a wider online safety push for minors.
 

TL;DR

 
  • Malaysia’s under-16 social media registration restriction came into effect on June 1, 2026.
  • Major platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube must verify user ages.
  • Existing users will be checked over a six-month period.
  • Non-compliant platforms may face fines of up to RM10 million, or around $2.5 million.
 

Malaysia has officially begun enforcing new rules that stop users below the age of 16 from registering accounts on major social media platforms.

The move was announced by the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission, which said the measure is aimed at strengthening child safety online rather than cutting young users off from technology altogether.

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“The measure is not intended to prohibit child users from the internet or to deny them access to technology,” said the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission, according to Reuters.

Instead, the regulator said the goal is to increase responsibility among social media platforms, parents, and guardians in protecting minors online.

From June 1, social media platforms including Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, TikTok, and Alphabet’s YouTube must conduct age verification against government-issued records. Reports from Malaysia say users may need to verify their age using documents such as MyKad, passports, or MyDigital ID.

The rule applies to licensed social media services with at least eight million users in Malaysia. Platforms must ensure that only users aged 16 and above can register new accounts and access age-appropriate features.

The rule will not only affect new account registrations. Existing users will also be required to undergo age verification, with platforms expected to carry out this process progressively over a six-month period.

Users found to be below 16 will reportedly get one month to download or transfer their data, including photos and videos, before restrictions or other account-level actions are applied.

Platforms that fail to comply may face penalties of up to RM10 million, which is about $2.5 million. Parents and guardians are not expected to face penalties under these rules, according to local reporting.

The change comes under Malaysia’s Online Safety Act 2025 and its Child Protection Code, which introduces stronger duties for major digital platforms. These duties include age verification, child safety by design, and stronger safeguards against harmful content.

Malaysia’s move also fits into a broader global shift around children’s access to social media. Reuters previously reported that Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil said Malaysia was studying approaches used by countries such as Australia as it prepared its own under-16 rules.

However, the rollout is already raising questions. AP reported that some parents support the measure because they believe it can help children develop healthier offline habits, while others worry children may move to less regulated services or try to bypass checks.

Digital rights group Article 19 also criticized the age-verification approach, arguing that government document-based checks could affect privacy and free expression for both children and adults.

For now, the pressure sits squarely on social media companies. They will need to build verification systems that satisfy Malaysian regulators while also addressing concerns around privacy, data handling, and user access.

First published on Mon, Jun 1, 2026

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