What’s happening: Ireland has launched its own version of age-verification regulation, coming into effect on 21 July 2025. The Irish Online Safety Code now requires digital platforms to verify users’ ages through objective means before allowing access to adult or otherwise harmful content.
Several video platforms are now required to block access to pornography, extreme violence, self-harm content, eating disorder promotion, cyberbullying, or hate speech. Unless effective age verification confirms the user is over 18, they will be unable to access the content. So, self-declaration alone is no longer sufficient.
Unlike earlier approaches that allowed users to simply declare they were over 18, this regulation demands real verification, potentially through third-party services, video selfies, or government-issued ID.
Key Points:
- Applies to platforms like TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and X
- Age must be verified through secure digital processes
- Fines of up to €20 million or 10% of global turnover for violations
- Part of broader EU efforts to align child safety laws
Why it matters: Ireland, home to many tech firms’ European HQs, is a strategic regulatory player. These moves could pressure platforms to adopt similar practices globally.
Parental takeaway: If your child uses a platform from Ireland’s jurisdiction, you may see stricter identity checks and questions from them about privacy. Prepare to explain how these systems work and why they’re being implemented.




Finally age verification is coming into effect
Yes! Let’s hope we see many more countries following in their footsteps. One small step at a time.