TikTok will begin rolling out its new age-detection technology across Europe in the coming weeks. The system predicts whether accounts belong to children under 13. It uses profile data, posted videos, and behavioural patterns to flag potential underage accounts.
Moderators to Review Flagged Accounts
Accounts identified by the age-detection technology will not be banned automatically. Specialist moderators will review flagged accounts before any action is taken. TikTok says this approach ensures fairness while protecting young users.
European Regulations Drive the Rollout
The rollout follows increased scrutiny by European authorities over age verification methods. Regulators are concerned existing approaches are either ineffective or overly invasive. TikTok worked closely with Ireland’s Data Protection Commission to ensure compliance with privacy rules.
Global Challenges in Age Verification
Despite extensive efforts, no universal method exists to confirm a person’s age while respecting privacy. TikTok plans to use facial-age estimation from Yoti, credit-card checks, and government-issued ID for appeals. Meta also uses Yoti to verify users on Facebook.
Impact and Regional Variations
Past pilots in the UK led to the removal of thousands of under-13 accounts. Other countries have considered stricter rules. Australia banned social media use for under-16s, and Denmark plans limits for those under 15. The European Parliament is reviewing age restrictions across platforms.
Users to Be Notified
European TikTok users will be informed as the age-detection technology launches. The company emphasizes the system was designed specifically for Europe to meet regional regulatory requirements while maintaining user privacy.



