School’s out, screens are on, and for countless families across the U.S., that means grappling with the same yearly challenge: how much screen time is actually okay? Google knows this dance. On June 16, 2026, the company announced a significant expansion of Android’s parental controls, rolling them out to all devices that update to Android 17 and bumping its U.S. digital wellbeing fund to more than $50 million.
This isn’t just another feature drop. It’s a deliberate response to a growing reality: summer vacation means more unsupervised device time, and parents need tools that work directly on the device itself, not just through a separate app. Let’s walk through what’s actually changing, why it matters, and what it means for families trying to find balance.
What’s new: Parental Controls built right into Android settings
The core update is straightforward but powerful. Google is expanding Android Parental Controls to all Android devices running Android 17, making these tools available directly within Android Settings instead of requiring parents to use only Google Family Link. This is a meaningful shift because it puts controls in the most convenient place for parents: the settings menu they already open.
These on-device controls, protected by a PIN that parents set, now offer four key capabilities:
| Feature | What It Does |
|---|---|
| Daily screen time limits | Set how much time your child can spend on the device each day to build healthy habits |
| Downtime schedules | Automatically lock the device at night so kids can sleep without distraction |
| App store filters for Google Play | Manage the highest content rating your child can download |
| App usage controls | Limit time on specific apps or block them entirely |
The beauty here is simplicity. Parents don’t need to navigate multiple apps or complex dashboards. They open Settings, find Parental Controls, and set what they need. The PIN protection ensures kids can’t just change things back.
Family Link still has its place (and gets new features too)
Android Parental Controls don’t replace Google Family Link—they complement it. The new settings page also provides a direct path to set up Family Link in the parent’s app. And Family Link itself has been getting meaningful upgrades since early 2025.
The biggest addition is “School Time,” a feature that allows parents to schedule limited phone functionality during school hours while silencing notifications. You can choose which apps stay allowed during School Time—like Google Meet for class or a calculator app—and set breaks for lunch or recess. This feature first appeared on the Fitbit ACE LTE and Samsung Galaxy Watch for Kids before expanding to Android phones and tablets.
Family Link also introduced parent-managed contacts, which let parents approve who their child can call and text through Google Messages and the dialer app. Kids can request new contacts, but parents approve or deny them. This gives families control over communication while still letting kids build their social connections.
Other Family Link capabilities include location alerts, Google Play app purchase approvals, and a new Screen Time tab where parents see how much time kids spend across different apps.
Why this matters: the real challenge parents face
Summer vacation creates a perfect storm for screen time struggles. Kids have fewer structured activities, more free time, and often less oversight than during the school year. Mindy Brooks, Google’s Global Head of Kids & Family, framed it this way in the announcement: “School’s out, and for many families, that means finding the right balance between summer sun and screen time.“
But this isn’t just about summer. The broader challenge is that digital wellbeing for kids requires consistent, accessible tools. Previous Android parental controls launched last year on Pixel devices, but now they’re available across all Android devices updating to Android 17. That universality matters because most kids in the U.S. don’t have Pixel phones—they have whatever Android device their family can afford.
The convenience of having controls in Settings rather than only in a separate app addresses a real friction point. Parents report that they need tools that work when they’re needed, not tools that require extra steps or app downloads. Putting parental controls directly in Android Settings removes that barrier.
The $50 million digital wellbeing fund: beyond features
Google didn’t just announce new controls. The company also increased its U.S. digital wellbeing fund to more than $50 million to support a healthier, more resilient generation of kids and teens. This funding will help introduce new interventions focused on best practices for healthy technology interactions and supports that combat social isolation.
That “social isolation” part is significant. Research shows that excessive technology use can contribute to loneliness and reduced social connectedness among young people. Experts emphasize that parents can model healthy tech habits by staying in touch with friends and family without technology, maintaining distance from social media, and showing kids how to ask friends for help.
The fund represents Google acknowledging that features alone don’t solve digital wellbeing challenges. Real change requires education, community support, and interventions that go beyond app settings.
How this fits into the larger Android update picture
Android 17 itself is a major update. Announced June 16, 2026, alongside these parental control changes, it brings new features across the board. The parental controls expansion is part of Android’s ongoing commitment to age-appropriate experiences and family support.
This also follows the June 2026 Android Drop, which introduced new personalization and safety features. Google has been steadily building safety and wellbeing capabilities into Android over the past couple of years, with parental controls first launching on Pixel in late 2025 before expanding universally.
What parents should do next
If you’re a parent using Android, here’s what matters:
First, check whether your device can update to Android 17. The new parental controls only work on devices with that update. If your phone supports it, updating will give you access to the built-in controls in Settings.
Second, decide whether you want just the on-device controls or also Family Link. The on-device controls handle daily limits, downtime, app filters, and app blocking. Family Link adds School Time scheduling, parent-managed contacts, location alerts, and purchase approvals. Many families will want both.

Third, set up the PIN. This is critical. Without PIN protection, kids can change settings back. The PIN ensures parents maintain control.
Fourth, consider School Time if your child is still in school or has online learning. Setting specific hours when only certain apps work can help kids focus during class while still allowing breaks.
The bigger picture: technology trying to be responsible
Google’s move reflects a broader industry trend. Tech companies are increasingly building parental controls and digital wellbeing features directly into their platforms, not as optional add-ons but as core capabilities. Apple has similar features in iOS, Samsung has built-in controls for its Galaxy Kids mode, and Microsoft offers family safety tools in Windows.
What makes Google’s approach notable here is the integration. Putting parental controls in Android Settings removes the friction of downloading separate apps. Pairing that with Family Link’s School Time and contact management gives families multiple layers of control. And the $50 million fund acknowledges that technical features need to be part of a larger conversation about how kids use technology.
The challenge isn’t solved, but tools are getting better
Digital wellbeing for kids remains complex. No set of controls will perfectly balance screen time, social connection, learning, and play. Parents still need to talk with their kids about technology, model healthy habits, and find offline activities that compete with screens.
But better tools make that conversation easier. When parents can set daily limits without fighting their kid over phone access, when they can schedule downtime so devices don’t disrupt sleep, and when they can approve contacts to prevent unwanted communication, they have more grounding for the bigger discussions about technology use.
Google’s expansion of Android parental controls, combined with Family Link’s ongoing improvements and the digital wellbeing fund, represents a step forward. It’s not a perfect solution, but it’s a meaningful one. For families navigating summers, school years, and the constant pull of screens, having accessible, straightforward controls built directly into the device is a win.
The real test will be whether families actually use these tools and whether they help create the balance parents are looking for. But for now, the options are there, accessible directly from Settings, protected by a PIN, and backed by a $50 million commitment to digital wellbeing. That’s progress worth paying attention to.
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