Social

How to set up parental controls on Facebook, Snapchat, TikTok and more popular sites

Comment

Image Credits: Daniel de la Hoz / Getty Images

Parental controls are offered by almost every popular media network, but many parents aren’t aware of them. Fewer than 10% of teens on Instagram had enabled parental control settings by the end of 2022 and only a single-digit percentage of parents had used the controls, according to a Washington Post report from earlier this year.

In response to concerns from Congress and rights groups about the potential harm social media inflicts on young users, tech companies have long argued that parental controls they offer protect kids. But because the parental controls aren’t on by default, they do little to protect users unless parents actually enable them.

Each platform approaches parental controls a bit differently, but most of them start by allowing parents to monitor who their teen is communicating with. Some social media platforms then go a bit further by allowing parents to intervene in how their teen uses an app.

TikTok appears to be the platform that gives parents the most control over their teens’ usage. The ByteDance-owned company has faced significant scrutiny from lawmakers, arguably more so than any other platform in this list. In an attempt to win over lawmakers, the app offers parental controls that are much more advanced than those on Instagram, Snapchat and others.��

And while most social media platforms offer some sort of parental controls, some have had them for longer than others. Meta has faced scrutiny for its potential negative effect on teens and young users for over a decade, which is why it’s had parental controls for many years, whereas a platform like Discord has been able to fly under the radar and has only recently introduced parental controls

Before getting into the controls, it’s important to recognize that teens can also create secret accounts, and that most of the parental controls on social networks rely on communication from both the parents and their teen. 

We’ve created this guide to make it easier for parents to navigate and understand the parental controls offered by popular social media companies, and we’ve detailed how they vary from platform to platform. 

How Instagram’s parental controls work 

Three screenshots of Instagram's Family Center
Image Credits: Instagram

Meta-owned Instagram offers parental controls through its Family Center offering. The social network gives users the option to create a “supervised account” for teens between the ages of 13 and 17. Both the teen and parent must agree to participate. 

In the Family Center, parents and guardians can supervise their teen’s account by seeing how much time they’re spending on the social network. Parents can intervene in their teen’s usage of the app by setting daily time limits or adding scheduled breaks. With this feature, parents can make sure their teen is only spending a certain amount of time on the app and isn’t using it during homework or school time.

They can also see their teen’s following and followers lists in order to monitor who can view their posts and message them. Parents can also see any reports that their teen has submitted to Instagram. 

Plus, parents can see their teen’s account privacy settings and sensitive content settings, along with their DM settings. They can discuss these settings with their teen to help ensure they are protected.

TikTok offers robust parental controls

Image Credits: TikTok

Like Instagram, TikTok lets parents link their account to their teen’s with its “Family Pairing” feature. After doing so, parents can decide how much time their teen can spend on the app each day. They can set their teen’s screen time limit and get a summary of how much time their teen spends on the app. 

The app also lets parents mute their teen’s push notifications (TikTok mutes notifications for teens between the ages of 13 and15 from 9 p.m. to 8 a.m. by default). Parents can also choose to pause their teens’ notifications for a custom amount of time.

TikTok lets parents take an additional step that other platforms on this list don’t: Parents can limit specific types of content. They have the option to select keywords or hashtags to exclude specific content from their teen’s For You and Following feeds. They can also enable a “Restricted Mode” that will automatically restrict their teen’s exposure to unsuitable or inappropriate content. 

In addition, parents can decide whether their teen can search for videos, hashtags or live videos. Plus, they can control whether their teen’s account can be recommended to others on the app. Parents can decide who can comment on their teens’ videos and who can view the content they like. 

In terms of DMs, parents can restrict who can message their teen or turn off direct messaging altogether. It’s worth noting that DMs on TikTok are only available to accounts belonging to users who are 16 and older.

How to set Snapchat’s parental controls

Image Credits: Snapchat

Snapchat offers parents access to a “Family Center” that lets them monitor some of their teen’s activity on the app. Parents have to create their own Snapchat accounts and then connect it with their teen’s.

Once parents pair the two accounts, they can see who their child is friends with on Snapchat. They can also get a glimpse of who they’ve messaged in the last seven days. Plus, parents can see a complete list of members in Groups that their teen has been active in over the last week. 

It’s worth noting that parents can’t see the messages their teen has shared; they can only see a list of people that their teen has recently messaged. 

Like on TikTok, parents can limit their teen’s ability to view sensitive content in Stories and Spotlight. 

If parents come across an account that they’re concerned about, they can report it to Snapchat’s Trust and Safety team. However, unlike on TikTok and Instagram, parents can’t monitor or limit much time their child is spending on the app.

How to set up Discord’s parental controls

Image Credits: Discord

Discord offers a “Family Center” that lets parents monitor their child’s activity on the platform. After enrolling in Family Center, parents receive a weekly email summary containing information about their teen’s activity. Although parents will be able to see which Discord communities and users their teens are talking to, they won’t be able to see the contents of the conversations themselves.

Parents can see their teen’s recently added friends, including their display names and avatars. They can also see which users their teen has messaged or called in direct or group messages, including the times of the last message or call. 

Plus, parents can see which servers their teen joined or participated in, including server icons, and server member counts.

Although Discord is regularly used by a young audience, the platform was until recently largely left out of the conversation around social networks and their potential to harm children. In the past, Discord was able to sit on the sidelines while Congress grilled Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and Facebook. However, Discord was asked to testify in Congress’ most recent hearing on child exploitation.

How to use Facebook’s parental controls

Image Credits: Meta

You may be surprised to see Facebook on this list because it’s largely known for being a social network for older people. However, while it may seem like teens aren’t using Facebook, recent reports suggest that young people are still using the Meta-owned platform. 

Parents can access Facebook’s supervision controls in the same place they monitor their child’s activity on Instagram. They can see how much time their teen has spent on the Facebook app each day over the past week, along with their average daily time spent for the week. To control their teens’ time spent on the app, parents can set scheduled breaks. 

In addition, parents can see their teen’s Facebook friends, along with their privacy settings and content preferences. They can also see the people and pages their teen has blocked.

Parental controls in X

X, formerly known as Twitter, is the only social media platform on this list that doesn’t offer any parental controls. While Twitter prohibits users under 13 on the platform, many lie about their age to join the platform. 

Compared to other social media platforms, X is drowning in adult content. The company has also relaxed its hate speech filters since being acquired by Elon Musk and is significantly more lenient around cyberbullying and hateful content compared to the rest of the platforms on this list. 

And while the majority of teens don’t use X, a Pew Research study from 2023 found that 23% of teens have used the social network, which is still a significant number, especially on a platform that isn’t doing anything to protect them. 

X, like Discord, has been able to fly under the radar when it comes to Congress’ concerns about protecting children online. However, the company was part of Congress’ hearing on child exploitation earlier this year.

More TechCrunch

Meta announced former President Donald Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts will no longer be subject to heightened suspension penalties, according to an updated blog post on Friday. The company says…

Meta removes special restrictions for Trump’s account ahead of 2024 elections

A Castro Valley resident was charged Thursday for allegedly slashing the tires of 17 Waymo robotaxis in San Francisco between June 24 and June 26, according to the city’s district…

Waymo cameras capture footage of person charged in alleged robotaxi tire slashings

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday. This…

Defending Russia’s EU neighbors

Cat-Wells said she started this platform because traditional hiring processes are exclusionary and often overlook skilled, talented disabled people.

A VC told Keely Cat-Wells to get a male, non-disabled co-founder — she balked, nabbed a $2M pre-seed round

A new study examines whether AI could be an automated helpmeet in creative tasks, with mixed results: It appeared to help less naturally creative people write more original short stories…

Experiment finds AI boosts creativity individually — but lowers it collectively

Featured Article

HeadSpin, whose founder is in prison for fraud, sold to PE firm in fire sale, sources say

In total, HeadSpin raised $117 million since its 2015 inception and was last valued at $1.1 billion in 2020.

HeadSpin, whose founder is in prison for fraud, sold to PE firm in fire sale, sources say

A bipartisan group of senators has introduced a new bill that seeks to protect artists, songwriters and journalists from having their content used to train AI models or generate AI…

New Senate bill seeks to protect artists’ and journalists’ content from AI use

When Keith Rabois announced he was leaving Founders Fund to return to Khosla Ventures in January, it came as a shock to many in the venture capital ecosystem — and…

From Ethan Choi to Spencer Peterson, venture capitalists continue to play musical chairs

Archer Aviation and Southwest Airlines are teaming up to figure out what it will take to build out a network of electric air taxis at California airports. Southwest’s customer data…

Archer’s vision of an air taxi network could benefit from Southwest customer data

If you visited the Wikipedia website on mobile this week, you might have seen a pop-up indicating that dark mode is ready for prime time.

Wikipedia’s mobile website finally gets a dark mode — here’s how to turn it on

Featured Article

What the AT&T phone records data breach means for you

The giant U.S. telco lost the information of around 110 million customers. Here’s what you need to know.

What the AT&T phone records data breach means for you

The error brings to a close SpaceX’s incredible streak of 335 flawless launches across the company’s Falcon family of rockets, which also includes the more powerful Falcon Heavy.

SpaceX Falcon 9 suffers rare failure on orbit during Starlink deployment

The AI chatbot has been trained on Amazon’s product catalog, customer reviews, community Q&As, and other public information found around the web.

Amazon AI chatbot Rufus is now live for all US customers

If X continues to violate Europe’s data protection rules, the company is on the hook for fines of up to €4,000 per day.

More bad news for Elon Musk after X user’s legal challenge to shadowban prevails

HERO Software has closed a €40 million Series B financing round, and plans to expand across Europe. 

A startup set out to fight climate change — it did it by helping plumbers

Fusion power may still be a few years away, but one startup is laying the groundwork for what it hopes will become a bustling sector of the economy.

Fusion pioneer Commonwealth Fusion Systems is selling core magnet tech to the University of Wisconsin

For months, rumors persisted that Google, and perhaps others, were interested in buying HubSpot, a Boston-based CRM and marketing software company. HubSpot’s market cap ballooned as the rumors persisted, eventually…

Boston VCs are pleased that HubSpot will remain an independent company

ByteDance’s video editing app CapCut will stop offering free cloud storage to host creative assets starting August 5. In the past few days, users have received notifications about CapCut changing…

CapCut will stop offering free cloud storage from August 5

The platform formerly known as Twitter has earned the dubious honor of being the first very large online platform (VLOP) to face a preliminary finding of breaching the European Union’s…

Europe confirms first clutch of DSA grievances on Elon Musk’s X

Featured Article

AT&T says criminals stole phone records of ‘nearly all’ customers in new data breach

The stolen data includes 110 million AT&T customer phone numbers, calling and text records, and some location-related data.

AT&T says criminals stole phone records of ‘nearly all’ customers in new data breach

The full and final text of the EU AI Act, the European Union’s landmark risk-based regulation for applications of artificial intelligence, has been published in the bloc’s Official Journal. In…

EU’s AI Act gets published in bloc’s Official Journal, starting clock on legal deadlines

Featured Article

SoftBank acquires UK AI chipmaker Graphcore

While the figure of $500 million has been bandied around in various reports for months, in a press briefing early Thursday morning, Graphcore co-founder and CEO Nigel Toon remained coy on the details.

SoftBank acquires UK AI chipmaker Graphcore

Elon Musk’s X, formerly Twitter, is continuing to develop a downvoting feature that will be used to improve how replies are ranked. Although the company has not yet officially announced…

X is building a ‘dislike’ button for downvoting replies

Featured Article

Data breach exposes millions of mSpy spyware customers

A huge batch of mSpy customer service emails dating back to 2014 were stolen in a May data breach.

Data breach exposes millions of mSpy spyware customers

Kudos founder says her company makes a disposable diaper lined with 100% cotton, unlike the major competitors.

Shark Tank-backed Kudos raises another $3M for healthier, cotton-based disposable diapers

Astra CEO Chris Kemp is already pulling out of a parking spot when he warns the person in the passenger seat that he doesn’t have a valid driver’s license. “And…

‘Wild Wild Space’ doc captures the risks and rivalries of the new space race

Although these companies’ claims are artfully couched, it’s clear that they want to express that the model sees in some sense of the word.

‘Visual’ AI models might not see anything at all

Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of transportation. Sign up here for free — just click TechCrunch Mobility! Did you…

Lucid revs up sales, Fisker makes a deal and Uber reignites an old fight

Retro CEO Nathan Sharp isn’t worrying just yet about Google’s plan to copy his app’s experience, despite the numerous similarities.

Photo-sharing startup Retro spots Google Photos copying its idea and design

Tesla had internally planned to build the dedicated robotaxi and the $25,000 car, often referred to as the Model 2, on the same platform.

Tesla reportedly delays ‘robotaxi’ event to October