The United Arab Emirates is developing a comprehensive, phased regulatory approach to safeguard children’s digital wellbeing, positioning itself at the forefront of online child protection initiatives. This strategic move comes as global concerns mount regarding children’s exposure to harmful digital content and practices.
Authorities are implementing a risk-based methodology that will initially focus on social media platforms before expanding to encompass broader digital services. The initiative establishes clear operational guidelines for service providers while creating robust compliance mechanisms to ensure age-appropriate content accessibility. This progressive framework represents a fundamental shift from reactive measures to proactive prevention, fundamentally redesigning how digital platforms operate for younger users.
The Education, Human Development and Community Development Council has identified the regulation of children’s social media usage as a critical priority. During recent deliberations, the Council emphasized the necessity of a unified national framework addressing both social media and digital services comprehensively. Officials examined the substantial impact of digital platforms on family dynamics, communication quality, and children’s cognitive development—including attention span, time management capabilities, and language acquisition.
To address these challenges, the UAE will provide families with practical tools for digital supervision and guidance, promoting healthier technology usage habits. Child development experts and mental health professionals will contribute specialized guidance, while coordinated public awareness campaigns will encourage responsible digital engagement. Multiple government sectors—including education, health, security, and media—will collaborate to ensure effective implementation.
Educational policies and school programs are being harmonized under the national framework, incorporating standardized assessments including Arabic language evaluations to identify children requiring additional support. Updates to Arabic language and Islamic studies curricula will simultaneously strengthen fundamental skills while reinforcing national values and identity.
This initiative builds upon the Child Digital Safety Law enacted in December 2025, which mandates protection from digital content adversely affecting children’s physical, psychological, and moral development. The legislation applies to internet service providers and digital platforms operating within or targeting UAE users, encompassing websites, search engines, applications, messaging services, forums, gaming platforms, social media, streaming services, and e-commerce platforms.
The law fundamentally transforms digital environments by requiring platforms to recognize age differences and adjust content, features, and protections accordingly. It prohibits children under 18 from accessing features involving betting, gambling, or monetary game mechanics while imposing strict limitations on how children’s data can be utilized. This approach embeds safety directly into platform architecture rather than relying solely on parental supervision or post-incident intervention.
