
The Australian government has added popular streaming platform Twitch to the list of apps banned in the country for children under the age of 16.
The country’s internet watchdog said on Friday that its upcoming teen social media ban would apply to the Amazon-owned live streaming service Twitch, popular among gamers.
Australia is set to enact the world’s first law barring children aged 16 years and under from using social media, with penalties of up to $32m (A$49.5m) for non-complying companies failing to take “reasonable steps”.
Platforms previously included in the list of banned apps include Meta’s Facebook, Instagram, and Threads, X, TikTok, YouTube, and Snapchat.
Though Twitch is mainly used by gamers for livestreaming, Australia’s eSafety Commissioner said on Friday that the streaming platform also qualifies as a social media service as its interactive content allows users, including children, to communicate with others “in relation to content posted”.
Twitch, mainly used by gamers to chat with viewers as they play video games, said it plans to deactivate all user accounts for people aged 16 and under from 9 January.
The company said it would also bar new underage users from creating accounts once the ban takes effect.
However, the watchdog said the list of apps banned for teenagers does not include the image-sharing platform Pinterest.
Platforms that are excluded from the new rules, “as of 21 November 2025” include Discord, GitHub, Google Classroom, Lego Play, Messenger, Pinterest, Roblox, Steam and Steam Chat, WhatsApp and YouTube Kids, the government said.
Pinterest has not been included in the ban since its core purpose is not about social interaction, Australia’s eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said.
Australia’s stringent rules are the most comprehensive efforts by any government to police minors’ access to social media.
“While most platforms currently have a minimum age of 13 for account holders, delaying account access until 16 will give young people more time to develop important skills and maturity,” the Australian government said.
“It’s breathing space to build digital literacy, critical reasoning, impulse control and greater resilience,” it said.
On Thursday, Meta announced it would start blocking the Instagram and Facebook accounts of Australian users under 16 from 4 December, a week before the government’s new law takes effect.


