« Back to Intelligence Feed Greece is Preparing Social Media Ban for Children Under 15

Greece is Preparing Social Media Ban for Children Under 15

ABI Analysis · Pan-African tech Sentiment: -0.60 (negative) · 17/03/2026
Greece is positioning itself at the forefront of Europe's digital regulation landscape with plans to impose a comprehensive social media ban for children under 15, a move that Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced will be formally proposed in the coming weeks. This legislative initiative represents one of Europe's most aggressive stances on protecting minors from digital platforms and signals a potential regulatory domino effect across the continent that European technology investors and entrepreneurs operating in African markets should closely monitor. The Greek proposal arrives amid growing international concern about social media's impact on adolescent mental health, sleep patterns, and social development. Countries including Spain, France, and Italy have already introduced various age-restriction mechanisms, yet Greece's approach of implementing an outright ban rather than partial restrictions marks a notable escalation. This legislative momentum in Europe creates important precedent that could influence how African nations approach digital regulation, particularly as many African governments look to European models when crafting their own technology policies. For European entrepreneurs with business interests extending across Africa, this development carries significant implications. Many European technology companies and digital marketing firms operating in African markets depend on youth demographics as core user bases for their platforms and services.

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Gateway Intelligence
European technology infrastructure and compliance solution providers should identify African market entry opportunities immediately, as African regulators will likely adopt similar youth protection frameworks within 18-36 months. Investors should prioritize funding age-verification technology, parental control software, and regulatory compliance platforms designed for scalability across emerging African markets. Conversely, reduce exposure to social media marketing agencies and platforms heavily dependent on under-15 demographics for revenue generation.

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Sources: Bloomberg Africa

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