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A Virginia Law Is Set To Limit Kids' Screen Time To An Hour A Day
May 24, 2025
On January 1, 2026, kids will need their parents permission to go beyond that state-wide limit.
by
Jamie Kenney
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As kids become tweens and teens, limiting their screen time gets harder and harder. After all, they have their phones and plenty of good (or at least reasonable) reasons why they need to have their devices on them at any given time. But, of course, even the most responsible teenagers aren’t spending all their screen time being productive and studious. No, like many of us, they’re spending a good amount of time mindlessly scrolling social media. And starting January 2026, the state of Virginia restricts users under the age of 16 to just one hour of social media per day.
The law is an amendment to the state’s Consumer Data Protection Act and puts the onus on social media companies like Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, and YouTube to verify users’ ages (using “neutral and commercially reasonable methods”); restrict access to their platforms to one hour a day; and only use data collected for age verification purposes.
While Governor Glenn Youngkin wanted to strengthen and expand some of the bill’s children’s privacy protections, the legislature ultimately did not adopt his recommendations.
Given ongoing debates about children and phones, especially in schools, it’s probably not a coincidence that it was co-sponsored by State Senator Schuyler VanValkenburg, a teacher.
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