After softer, region-specific rollouts, Discord has now announced global child protection settings that will default all users to an age-locked "teen-by-default" status pending age verification via ID or selfie age estimation. Teen-by-default settings will hit "all new and existing users worldwide" in March 2026, starting with "a phased global rollout."
Discord announced the change today, echoing a rise in age-based online protections purportedly aimed at child safety.
Once marked as a teen on Discord, "users may be required to engage in an age-verification process to change certain settings or access sensitive content."
This includes filters for "truly adult content," according to product policy head Savannah Badalich (thanks, The Verge), as well as "age-gated spaces" including channels and servers, and chat for live "stage" shows in servers. Direct messages from "people a user may not know" will additionally be "routed to a separate inbox," and friend request alerts will similarly receive a warning prompt.
To slough off these age restrictions, you "can choose to use facial age estimation or submit a form of identification to [Discord's] vendor partners, with more options coming in the future."
Age estimation runs "video selfies" through an AI that tries to determine how old you are. Discord says these selfies "never leave a user’s device."
ID verification will be handled by third-party vendors. Again, Discord says, "Identity documents submitted to our vendor partners are deleted quickly – in most cases, immediately after age confirmation."
The phrase "in most cases" is putting in work there, as is the word "vendor". You may recall that in October 2025, a now-ex Discord vendor was breached, with Discord admitting that "approximately 70,000 users ... may have had government-ID photos exposed, which our vendor used to review age-related appeals."
"This was not a breach of Discord, but rather a breach of a third-party service provider, 5CA, that we used to support our customer service efforts," Discord said at the time. But with the company rolling out ID-collecting verification globally, scrutiny of age-related appeal processing is only going to intensify, and the volume of user data in Discord's pipelines will only grow.
When Discord does add "more options" for age verification, we'll apparently see an "age inference model, a new system that runs in the background to help determine whether an account belongs to an adult, without always requiring users to verify their age." Again, this looks to be AI trying its best to see if you're old. It's unclear how, or how reliably, the model will assess users. Should we start posting about lower back pain and taxes, just to be safe?
Badalich acknowledged the risk of users leaving Discord over this change – which, based on the reactions I've seen online, is the safest conclusion to draw from this news. "We do expect that there will be some sort of hit there," she said, "and we are incorporating that into what our planning looks like. We'll find other ways to bring users back."
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