HOUSE Speaker Faustino “Bojie” G. Dy III and Majority Leader Ferdinand Alexander “Sandro” Marcos have filed a bill that would impose fines of up to P50 million on social media platforms that fail to comply with mandatory child online safety standards, including age verification, parental controls, and safeguards against harmful content.
House Bill No. 9965, or the proposed Children’s Social Media Safety Act, also authorizes the temporary restriction of access to social media platforms in the Philippines—or even their prohibition from operating in the country in cases of repeated and serious violations, subject to due process.
The measure seeks to establish the country’s first comprehensive regulatory framework governing children’s access to and use of social media platforms while promoting responsible, age-appropriate digital engagement through stronger safeguards, greater platform accountability, enhanced parental supervision, and digital literacy.
According to the bill’s explanatory note, the proposal is anchored on the State’s constitutional duty to protect the rights and welfare of children and to promote their physical, moral, intellectual, and social well-being.
“In the digital age, this duty extends to ensuring that children are protected from risks arising from the use of social media and other digital platforms. At its core, this bill recognizes that every child deserves a safe environment to grow, learn, and develop free from harm both in the physical and digital world,” the explanatory note states.
The explanatory note cited studies linking excessive social media use among children to increased anxiety and depression, low self-esteem, sleep disruption, cyberbullying, exposure to harmful content, and compulsive use driven by platform design. It also warned that children are increasingly exposed to misleading and artificially generated content that can distort reality and adversely affect their development.
The explanatory note further pointed out that existing laws do not provide a comprehensive framework governing the responsibilities of social media platforms in protecting children online despite the growing influence of algorithms and digital systems on what young users see and consume.
“This bill seeks to address these gaps by establishing safety standards and regulatory measures governing children’s access to and use of social media. It adopts a clear age-based regulatory framework by imposing an absolute prohibition on the use of social media by children below thirteen (13) years of age, recognizing their heightened vulnerability and limited capacity to navigate digital risks,” it added.
Consistent with this framework, children below 13 years old would be prohibited from creating, maintaining, or using social media accounts. Social media platforms would be required to implement reliable age verification systems, immediately disable prohibited accounts upon discovery, and adopt safeguards to prevent children from repeatedly creating new accounts to evade the prohibition.
For children aged 13 to below 18, access would only be allowed with verifiable parental or guardian consent and active, continuous supervision. Platforms would also be required to periodically re-verify users’ age and parental consent, while automatically restricting or suspending access once such consent is withdrawn.
The measure also requires social media companies to provide parents and guardians with tools to supervise their children’s accounts, monitor online activity and interactions, access privacy settings, set screen time limits and breaks, and withdraw consent whenever necessary.
To strengthen online safety, the bill mandates platforms to apply the highest privacy and safety settings by default for child users, restrict geolocation sharing and financial transactions by minors, prevent automatic redirection to potentially harmful external websites, and prohibit the unnecessary collection or use of children’s biometric and sensitive personal data, in accordance with the Data Privacy Act of 2012.
HB 9965 likewise seeks to regulate the algorithms and digital systems used by social media platforms to recommend and distribute content. It would prohibit algorithms from promoting harmful content, require platforms to detect and limit children’s exposure to such material, prevent manipulative platform designs that may harm children’s development, and require the removal of artificially generated or altered content that falsely depicts real events, persons or statements or is reasonably likely to mislead or deceive users.
To improve accountability, the proposal requires platforms to disclose how their algorithms determine or influence the content shown to users, subject algorithmic decisions affecting children to meaningful human oversight, and regularly submit transparency reports to the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT).
The measure also directs the DICT, in coordination with the Department of Education, to integrate digital literacy and ethical social media use into the K to 12 curriculum. It likewise mandates regular training for teachers and awareness programs for parents and children to promote responsible online behavior and digital well-being.
To ensure compliance, the bill imposes administrative fines on social media platforms that fail to comply with their obligations under the Act. Platforms that fail to act on requests involving prohibited accounts may be fined between P5 million and P10 million, while violations of the law’s platform obligations and enforcement requirements carry stiffer penalties of P20 million to P50 million. In cases of repeated and serious violations, platforms may face temporary restriction of access within the Philippines or be prohibited from operating in the country, subject to due process.
Recognizing that healthy childhood extends beyond the digital space, the bill also mandates local government units, through their Local Councils for the Protection of Children, to establish age-appropriate community-based recreational programs, maintain device-free community spaces, and organize sports, arts, and civic activities that encourage children to spend more time offline.
The explanatory note emphasized that the bill seeks to create “a safer digital environment for children while upholding their rights to access information, privacy, and freedom of expression.”
“More importantly, it affirms the State’s responsibility to place the best interests of the child at the center of digital governance and to ensure that technology serves, rather than harms, their development.”
