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Australia Social Media Ban: Meta Blocks 550,000 Accounts in First Week

2 min readSource

Meta has blocked 550,000 accounts in the first week of Australia's strict social media ban for under-16s. Explore the breakdown of Instagram, Facebook, and Threads account blocks.

In just seven days, 550,000 accounts have vanished from the Australian digital landscape. As the world's strictest social media regulations take effect, Meta has initiated a massive purge of users suspected to be under the age of 16. This aggressive enforcement marks the first major compliance report since Australia enacted its landmark ban in late 2025.

Meta Blocks 550,000 Accounts Under Australia’s Social Media Ban

According to a recent blog update from Meta, the company blocked 330,639 accounts on Instagram, 173,497 on Facebook, and 39,916 on Threads within the first week of total compliance. The new law requires platforms to prevent Australians under 16 from maintaining accounts, notably without any exemptions for parental consent—a move that has made Australia a global test case for internet governance.

This is the only way to guarantee consistent, industry-wide protections for young people, no matter which apps they use, and to avoid the whack-a-mole effect.

Official Meta Statement on Age Verification

Global Eyes on the World's Strictest Online Safety Law

While the policy is popular among Australian parents, it faces significant pushback from tech giants and safety advocates alike. Meta continues to argue that age verification should happen at the App Store level rather than on individual apps. Meanwhile, mental health experts warn that the ban might isolate vulnerable groups, such as LGBTQ+ or neurodivergent youth, who rely on these platforms for community and support.

The international community is watching closely. Jurisdictions like the European Union and several US states are experimenting with similar limits, but none have gone as far as Australia's total prohibition. The success or failure of this 'great disconnection' will likely dictate the future of child safety laws worldwide.

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