
Okay, so I just found out Google’s been emailing kids – like, 12-year-olds – to let them know they can ditch parental controls when they hit 13. It’s kinda weird, right? Basically, Google’s giving them a heads-up that they’ll soon be able to manage their own accounts without mom or dad looking over their shoulder. Seems a little early to be sending those emails, honestly.
Most parents use safety tools and monitoring to protect their children online, but Google is now giving kids the ability to disable those features and is informing them about how to do so.
On January 11th, Melissa McKay, who leads the Digital Childhood Institute, posted an email her son received from Google asking to lift the parental controls on his account.
A massive company worth over a trillion dollars is emailing children directly, telling them they’re old enough to manage themselves without their parents’ oversight. The email details how kids can bypass parental controls on their own, without needing permission or help from their parents, according to a post on LinkedIn.
Google lets 13-year-olds decide to disable parental supervision
So, I got this email from Google – it was addressed to ‘Mike,’ which is me! They said because my birthday’s around the corner, I could update my account and unlock a bunch of extra apps and services. Pretty cool, right?
The policy also explained that teenagers over 13 with supervised accounts could request to remove that supervision.
McKay was upset by this, claiming Google was trying to control something that wasn’t theirs to control.
She explained that this approach portrays parents as obstacles children eventually overcome, while suggesting corporate platforms are the natural alternative. Having worked in online safety for almost a decade, she called this one of the most exploitative practices she’s witnessed, describing it as completely unacceptable and urging companies to leave children alone.
Today, Google emailed my young child, letting him know he’s turning 13 and will soon be able to manage his own online account – meaning he can remove the parental controls we have in place. It’s surprising to me that such a large company is contacting children directly to tell them they’re old enough to have more independence online.
— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) January 11, 2026
Matthew Stoller, a researcher with the American Economic Liberties Project, shared this post on X, echoing the concerns raised by McKay.
These types of emails are standard procedure from Google.
According to Google’s help resources, when a child reaches the age of 13 (or the corresponding age in their location), both the child and their supervising parent receive an email notifying them that the child can now update their own account.
When parents disable the parental controls, they lose the ability to schedule downtime, manage app access, and share their child’s location.
“Children can decide if they want to turn [location sharing] on again.”
Users will also lose access to YouTube Kids, and some content that was previously restricted will now be accessible.
Piunikaweb points out that in the United States, the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) only safeguards the privacy of children under 13. Once a child reaches their 13th birthday, these protections no longer apply, and they are then tracked online like an adult.
Google’s system is designed around a specific age limit. Once a user reaches the legal age, they’re automatically moved from a restricted account to a standard one, which is more profitable for Google.
Melissa McKay contends that the law doesn’t give Google or similar companies the power to reach out to children regarding the removal of parental controls.
However, parents should definitely know about this, particularly if they’re worried about what their children are seeing online.
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2026-01-13 01:20