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Would banning TikTok make kids safer? Half of parents think so, according to survey

Cristina POPOV

March 19, 2026

Would banning TikTok make kids safer? Half of parents think so, according to survey

TikTok is one of the most popular social media platforms among children and teenagers, shaping trends, humor, and daily online habits. At the same time, it raises growing worries about their safety on the platform. Parents, educators, and policymakers have voiced concerns about addictive algorithms, viral challenges, exposure to inappropriate content, and the amount of personal data collected from young users.

As governments debate whether social media should face stricter rules or even bans, a new survey shows what parents actually think about TikTok’s risks and whether removing the app would really make children safer online.

Key findings:

  • 50% of parents believe banning TikTok would improve child safety.
  • Only 31% support a full ban for everyone.
  • 67% believe stronger laws are needed to protect minors online.
  • 37% of users say they would use a VPN to bypass a ban.
  • Real safety requires supervision, education, and privacy protections — not just removing one app.

Why do so many parents think a TikTok ban would make kids safer?

According to the Security.org survey, over 90% of parents worry about social media’s impact on their children, including screen time, mental health, addiction, and exposure to inappropriate content.

25% of parents consider TikTok the most dangerous social media platform for children, while nearly one-third believe all social media platforms are equally dangerous.

When parents describe TikTok as dangerous, they often point to:

  • Addictive algorithm design
  • Behavioral influence and viral trends and challenges that encourage risky behavior
  • Exposure to inappropriate content
  • Cyberbullying and predators
  • Data collection and privacy risks

Why only a third of parents support a full TikTok ban

On the other hand, parents know that banning a platform rarely solves the actual problem, as users can find other platforms or ways to bypass restrictions.

1. Kids migrate quickly to other platforms

When one app becomes restricted, teens don’t simply stop using social media but rather move elsewhere. The behavior stays the same; only the app changes.

2. VPN workarounds are common

The same survey found that 37% of TikTok users say they would use a VPN to bypass a ban. That introduces a new layer of risk. Many teens download free VPN apps without understanding what they do or what data they collect. Some free VPNs track users, collect browsing data, or inject ads.

A ban could unintentionally push young users toward other tools and apps that are dangerous.

Related: Free VPN vs Paid VPN: Are Free VPNs Safe?

3. The core risks aren’t platform-specific

Addiction, social comparison, cyberbullying, data harvesting, and algorithm-driven content exist across nearly every major social media platform. Banning one app may reduce exposure temporarily, but it doesn’t build digital resilience.

Protection that works: What would make kids safer online?

86% of parents from the survey support laws requiring parental permission before minors join social media platforms. 84% want full access to their child’s account and activity. 85% believe schools should teach social media safety and digital literacy. And more than 90% say companies should not be allowed to collect personal data from minors.

Taken together, these responses point to a broader goal: control, transparency, and meaningful protection for young users.

In practice, protection tends to work best when it combines several approaches.

  1. Gradual introduction. Not every child is ready for every platform at the same age. Maturity matters more than peer pressure.
  2. Active supervision during setup. Parents should help create accounts, set privacy settings to the highest level, and disable unnecessary data sharing.
  3. Digital literacy education. Kids benefit from understanding how algorithms work, how scams operate, and why oversharing can create long-term consequences.
  4. Open communication. Children are more likely to report bullying, grooming attempts, or harmful trends when they know they won’t immediately get into trouble.
  5. Technology that supports families. Bitdefender Family Plans help parents manage the digital side of protection with tools such as parental controls, internet time management, and content filtering across multiple devices. Beyond parental controls, Bitdefender Family Plans protect every member of the household, not just children. They add safeguards against phishing, scams, suspicious links, and other online threats while giving parents better visibility into potential risks. These tools don’t replace trust or dialogue, but they can reduce exposure to harmful content and help create a safer digital environment for the whole family.

Take a look at one of our family plans.

FAQs

Would banning TikTok make kids safer online?

Some parents believe it would help, but banning one platform does not eliminate the risks of social media. Teens often move to other apps or use VPNs to bypass restrictions. Real safety usually comes from supervision, privacy settings, and digital literacy.

Why do parents worry about TikTok?

Parents often cite concerns about addictive algorithms, viral challenges, exposure to inappropriate content, cyberbullying, and how much personal data the app collects from young users.

Which social media platforms do parents think are most dangerous for kids?

According to the survey, 25% of parents consider TikTok the most dangerous platform for children, while nearly one-third believe all social media platforms pose similar risks.

How can parents protect kids on social media?

Experts recommend gradual access to platforms, strong privacy settings, parental supervision, digital literacy education, and open conversations about online behavior and safety.

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Cristina POPOV

Cristina Popov is a Denmark-based content creator and small business owner who has been writing for Bitdefender since 2017, making cybersecurity feel more human and less overwhelming.

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