Meta announced new artificial intelligence-powered age detection systems this week designed to identify and remove underage users from its platforms. The technology analyzes visual elements including height and bone structure in photos and videos to estimate user age without employing facial recognition capabilities, according to company statements released May 5.
The updated detection framework builds on existing methods that scan user profiles for age indicators such as birthday celebrations or school grade mentions across posts, comments, bios, and captions. Meta emphasized the visual analysis system examines general themes and physical cues rather than identifying specific individuals, addressing privacy concerns that led the company to shut down its facial recognition features entirely in 2021. The company enrolled hundreds of millions of teens into protected Teen Accounts across Instagram, Facebook, and Messenger since September 2024.
Meta will implement simplified reporting flows allowing users to flag suspected underage accounts while expanding proactive teen detection technology to Brazil and 27 European Union countries. US-based parents will receive notifications on Facebook and Instagram with guidance about verifying their teenagers’ listed ages within each application.
The enhanced enforcement measures arrive as Meta faces mounting regulatory pressure. A New Mexico jury ordered the company to pay $375 million in civil penalties in March 2026 for violating consumer protection laws and endangering children, while the European Commission announced preliminary findings in April determining Meta’s age-checking systems failed to meet Digital Services Act obligations. Despite technological advances, recent reports indicate approximately 46% of children believe age checks remain easy to bypass through methods including entering false birthdates or using someone else’s identification.
