For parents and developers alike, the tug-of-war over screen time has long been a messy, manual affair. It’s the digital equivalent of trying to explain to a child why they can’t eat dessert before dinner; you want them to enjoy themselves, but you’re also trying to manage the quality and quantity of what they’re consuming.
Apple has been steadily refining its Screen Time tools for years, but as of this week, they’re taking a much more surgical approach. Following up on the announcement of “Time Allowances” in iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 27 last month, the company has updated the age rating questionnaire in App Store Connect. Starting now, developers need to be much more explicit about whether their apps function as social media.
This isn’t just a bit of administrative red tape. It’s the foundation for a much smarter parental control system.
The core of this update is how Apple defines a “social media capability.” If an app allows users to redistribute, amplify, or interact with user-generated content—essentially, if there is a social feed or a discovery mechanism for shared content—developers are now required to check the box for it.
It doesn’t matter if your app is categorized as a “Utility” or a “Photo & Video” app in the store; if it behaves like social media, Apple wants it labeled as such. Once that label is attached, it triggers a new “Social Media” content descriptor, which will appear on the app’s product page for users to see.
For parents, this is a significant quality-of-life improvement. Up until now, managing device usage often meant setting blanket timers for an entire device or micromanaging specific apps. With the Time Allowances feature coming in the latest OS updates, parents will be able to set time limits based on categories. A child might get two hours of “Entertainment” and perhaps a more restricted window for “Social Media.”
By forcing developers to self-report these capabilities, Apple is effectively automating the categorization process. Parents won’t have to manually figure out which apps qualify as “social media” and group them into their own custom folders or limits; the system will simply know.
There is, of course, a “grace period” for the developer community. While the questionnaire is live and ready for review right now, the hammer drops in September 2026. After that date, these responses will be a mandatory part of the submission process for all new apps and any app updates. For those building apps that strictly disable social features for users under 13, there is some good news: you can indicate that these features are turned off for younger users, meaning your app won’t be lumped into the social media bucket for those specific kids.
It’s a clear signal of where Apple is heading with its platform strategy. We are moving away from the era of “dumb” parental controls—where everything was either “on” or “off”—and into a more nuanced, category-aware ecosystem. It’s a move that recognizes that not all screen time is created equal. Scrolling through an infinite feed of user-generated content is fundamentally different from playing a puzzle game or watching an educational video, and finally, the software is starting to reflect that distinction.
For the developers reading this, the task is straightforward: take a hard look at your app’s architecture. If you’re building in any mechanism for social interaction or content discovery, it’s time to update your questionnaire. September will be here before you know it.
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