Discord were due to launch their teen safety settings in March but Discord’s CTO Stanislav Vishnevskiy has released a detailed blog post acknowledging community backlash and announcing several significant changes to how the company plans to roll out age verification globally. Here’s what parents need to know.
The big headline: the global rollout is delayed
Discord has pushed its full global age assurance rollout to the second half of 2026. The company says it wants more time to expand verification options and publish clearer documentation before scaling up. Where legal obligations already exist — in the UK, Australia, and Brazil (where new rules take effect on 17 March 2026) — Discord will continue to meet them.
What’s actually changing
More ways to verify age Discord is expanding the number of verification methods available, including credit card verification, which was in development but wasn’t ready in time for the initial rollout. The goal is to give users options they feel comfortable with, not a single take-it-or-leave-it process.
Stricter rules on facial age estimation Discord has set a new requirement for any vendor offering facial age estimation: it must happen entirely on-device. That means your child’s face scan — if they ever need one — would be processed locally on their phone and never sent to any server. One vendor, Persona, was trialled in the UK in January and dropped after failing to meet this bar.
Full vendor transparency Discord has committed to publishing a list of every verification vendor it works with, including how each one handles data. This information will also appear directly in the product, so users know exactly who is handling their information before they choose a method.
A new “spoiler channel” option This one is less about age and more about community design. Discord acknowledged that many servers were using age-restricted channels not for adult content, but to hide spoilers or sensitive topics like politics. They’re building a dedicated spoiler channel type so communities don’t have to gate an entire server just to give members that choice.
Transparency reporting on age assurance Future transparency reports will include data on how many users were asked to verify, what methods they used, and how often the automated system handled it without any user action at all.
What hasn’t changed
Discord’s internal systems can already determine that the majority of adult users are adults — without asking them to do anything. According to the company, over 90% of users will never see a verification prompt at all.
If a user does need to verify and chooses not to, they keep their account, friends list, servers, DMs, and voice chat. The only restriction is access to age-restricted content and certain safety settings. Nothing else about their Discord experience changes.
The teen-by-default safety settings we covered — restricted content, limited communication options, appropriate defaults — remain in place.
What this means for your family right now
For most families, nothing needs to change today. If your child is under 18, their account should already be in restricted mode under the teen-by-default settings Discord rolled out in early March 2026.
The age verification process itself — with its expanded options and on-device biometrics requirement — won’t arrive globally until later this year at the earliest. When it does, Discord has committed to making it clearly explained in the product itself, not buried in a blog post.
In the meantime, talk to your kids about who they’re chatting with, review their server list together, and check that Discord’s Family Center is connected to their account so you can see activity summaries.
Sources: Discord blog (Stanislav Vishnevskiy, 24 February 2026)



