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AppsMetaSecurityTechWhatsApp

WhatsApp launches parent-managed accounts for kids under 13

Parent-managed accounts keep kids under 13 on WhatsApp, but lock their experience down to messaging, calling and carefully approved contacts only.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 12, 2026, 8:59 AM EDT
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Promotional graphic for WhatsApp’s parent‑managed accounts showing three smartphone screens: the first with a family photo lock screen and notifications for a “Family Chat” and “Parental controls – You’re now managing Liam’s account,” the second with a “Liam – Managed account” activity feed listing actions like joining a math study group, changing profile picture, adding Grandma and blocking a contact, and the third with notification settings toggles for a child’s account including critical alerts, chats and contacts, groups, disappearing messages and account updates, alongside large “Parent‑managed accounts” text and the WhatsApp logo on a light beige background.
Image: WhatsApp
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WhatsApp is finally doing the thing a lot of parents have been asking for quietly for years: an official way to let pre-teens use the app, without just pretending they’re 16 or 18 in the signup form. With “parent-managed accounts”, the company is carving out a middle ground between “no WhatsApp at all” and “full, unfiltered adult account”, aimed squarely at kids under 13 who are already borrowing their parents’ phones or sneaking onto family groups anyway.

At its core, a parent-managed account is a normal WhatsApp account with guardrails. The parent (or guardian) sets it up, keeps it linked to their own WhatsApp, and controls who can talk to the child, which groups they can be in, and how visible they are on the platform. The kid still gets to chat and call, but features like Status, Channels, Meta AI, location sharing, chat lock and other more “grown‑up” tools are either turned off or tightly restricted by default. The entire idea is to acknowledge that pre‑teens are already online, and then give families a safer, more supervised way to handle that reality instead of looking the other way.

Setting up one of these accounts isn’t just a toggle buried in settings; it’s a flow built for families. Parents start on the child’s phone with a fresh WhatsApp registration, enter the pre‑teen’s date of birth, and then choose the option to create a parent-managed account. WhatsApp then walks them through linking that new account to the parents’ own WhatsApp by putting both phones side by side and scanning a QR code, tying the two together in the background. In some markets, Meta also asks the adult to confirm they are, in fact, an adult (for example, by capturing a selfie) as part of age assurance. Once that’s done, the child’s account stays permanently linked to the parent’s, and the adult becomes the gatekeeper for contacts, groups and key privacy controls.

Related /

  • How to configure WhatsApp parent-managed accounts on Android and iOS

This is where the safety piece really kicks in. By default, a parent-managed account can talk only to people saved in its contacts, and only parents can add that account to groups. If someone unknown tries to message the child, the message doesn’t just land in the main inbox – it’s routed to a separate “Requests” folder on the child’s phone that only unlocks after the parent enters a special PIN. Parents can review these requests, decide whether to allow, block or report the contact, and WhatsApp will also notify them when their child adds or blocks someone, joins or leaves a group, or when a group turns on disappearing messages. It’s a mix of proactive defaults and reactive alerts, designed to catch the kinds of edge cases parents typically worry about: random DMs, sketchy group invites, and subtle changes in how a kid is using the app.

Under the hood, WhatsApp is careful to stress that none of this comes at the cost of encryption. Parent-managed accounts still use end‑to‑end encryption, which means chats remain scrambled in transit and cannot be read by WhatsApp or Meta – only the devices involved can decrypt the messages. The supervision layer lives in the app’s controls and metadata, not in reading content. Parents shape the environment: they can tweak who can see the child’s profile photo or last seen, review message requests, and adjust activity alerts, but they don’t get a secret “backdoor” to silently read every message from their own device. For families, that’s an important nuance: this is more about structuring how kids use WhatsApp – who they talk to, where they show up – than about turning the parent into an all‑seeing moderator.

The other big trade‑off here is features versus simplicity. Part of the promise of these accounts is that they’re stripped down on purpose. Parents can’t turn WhatsApp into a full social feed for their kids, even if they wanted to. Pre‑teens won’t see or use things like Status updates, public Channels or connected devices, and they can’t go around linking their account on multiple phones and PCs the way adults increasingly do. The experience is messaging‑and‑calling‑first: talk to your family group, chat with a few school friends whose numbers your parents have approved, send a quick voice note when you reach home – but you’re not wandering into semi‑public spaces inside the app.

From a parent’s perspective, the PIN system is doing a lot of the heavy lifting. When they first create a parent-managed account, they set a six‑digit parent PIN that sits on the child’s phone as a gate for sensitive parts of the app. Want to change privacy settings, review message requests, or adjust who can see the child’s info? The app asks for that PIN before proceeding. This helps prevent kids from simply going into Settings and flipping everything to “Everyone” the moment the parent looks away, and it also gives adults a single place to secure their oversight – if you keep that PIN safe, you keep the guardrails in place.

Zoom out a bit and it’s clear why WhatsApp is doing this now. Messaging has become the default layer of family communication globally – from quick “reached school” pings to sharing homework PDFs to extended‑family groups coordinating festivals and birthdays. At the same time, regulators and child‑safety advocates have been turning up the heat on how social and messaging apps handle under‑13s, especially in markets where the legal minimum age for online services is being revisited. WhatsApp’s move lets the company say, “Yes, children are here, and here’s a more constrained, policy‑friendly way to support that,” instead of pretending every user is a teenager or older.

For families, the impact will depend a lot on how they choose to use these tools. A parent who wants to keep their pre‑teen entirely offline still can; nothing about this feature forces anyone to put WhatsApp on a child’s phone. But for the growing number of households where a “starter phone” in middle school feels inevitable, parent‑managed accounts offer a more structured on‑ramp: kids get independence in small, supervised doses, and parents get visibility without needing to stand over their shoulder for every message. It’s the digital equivalent of letting a child cycle around the block – but insisting they wear a helmet, stay on familiar roads, and check in when they’re back.

WhatsApp says parent-managed accounts will roll out gradually over the coming months, which means you may not see the option immediately, depending on your region. When it does land, it’s likely to become one of the most important features for families on the platform – not because it adds something flashy, but because it acknowledges a simple reality: kids are already part of the chat, and now the app is finally catching up to that.


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