Karnataka becomes 1st Indian state to ban social media for children under 16 | Technology News

3 min readUpdated: Mar 6, 2026 04:23 PM The southern Indian state of Karnataka, home to the tech hub of Bengaluru, banned the use of social media those under the age of 16 on Friday, becoming the first in India to join global calls for more scrutiny of minors’ digital usage. Concerns surrounding children’s growing social media addiction and exposure to unrestricted internet access have fired up a global debate, prompting Australia to become the first country to ban social media for children in December.
Britain, Denmark and Greece are also studying the issue and similar considerations are taking shape elsewhere in India, one of the world’s largest social media markets.
“With the objective of preventing adverse effects of increasing mobile usage on children, usage of social media will be banned for children under the age of 16,” state Chief Miner Siddaramaiah, who uses only one name, said in his annual budget speech on Friday.
He did not mention when the ban would take effect.
India is the world’s second-biggest smartphone market with 750 million devices and a billion internet users. For Meta , the country is its biggest market with the highest number of users on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp worldwide. Less than one-quarter of Karnataka’s population is under the age of 15, a report of a 2019-20 survey conducted India’s federal health minry showed. The state has a population of 67.6 million, a 2025 presentation federal government think tank Niti Aayog showed.
Bengaluru, often dubbed India’s Silicon Valley, is home to global technology firms such as Microsoft, Amazon, IBM , Dell and Google. Karnataka’s neighbouring state Goa is also weighing a similar ban, its IT miner said in January, while in the same month, a lawmaker from Andhra Pradesh state proposed a bill to curb social media for children. New Delhi should draft policies on age-based access limits to tackle “digital addiction”, India’s chief economic adviser said in January, drawing wide support.
Some activs and tech experts have, however, called for measures to help children and parents develop healthy and safe social media usage, saying that age-based curbs do not work as children can pass them with fake identification documents.


