Apple starts checking your age before you download these apps

Apple just started blocking certain app downloads in three countries. Users in Brazil, Australia, and Singapore now face automatic age checks when trying to download apps rated 18+ from the App Store.

The move is part of a broader effort to comply with child safety laws worldwide. Apple told developers about the changes Tuesday, expanding its age assurance tools to meet new rules in the US and abroad.

For affected users, the process is automatic. The App Store checks your age in the background before letting you download mature content. Developers still have their own compliance duties to handle.

How the new blocks actually work

The block happens instantly when you try to download an 18+ app. You don’t need to upload an ID or prove anything manually. Apple just confirms your age using your account details.

But developers aren’t off the hook. They still need to meet any age verification requirements their local laws demand.

For gamers in Brazil, the rules are stricter. Apps with loot boxes now carry an automatic 18+ rating, keeping kids away from gambling-like mechanics.

The bigger shift happening behind the scenes

These three countries aren’t the only ones. Apple is also expanding tools in the US, with new users in Utah and Louisiana soon having their age range shared with developers.

The company is beta testing an updated Declared Age Range API. It gives developers a user’s age bracket without revealing their exact birth date. It’s a privacy-focused fix for a growing problem, as more governments pass laws restricting kids from certain apps.

What comes next for Apple’s age checks

This won’t be the last expansion. Apple moves quickly when new laws take effect. The company worked on similar requirements in Texas last year but paused in December while that law faces a court challenge.

Apple isn’t alone in racing to build these tools. ChatGPT started rolling out age prediction in January, analyzing account behavior to estimate whether someone’s under 18 and automatically applying content filters. Users flagged incorrectly can verify their age through Persona, an identity service that uses live selfies and government IDs.

Discord took a different path. The platform announced global age verification in February but quickly delayed it to late 2026 after users pushed back over privacy concerns.

For now, the strictest rules apply in Brazil, Australia, and Singapore. But the pattern is clear. More places are demanding age checks, and platforms are scrambling to catch up. If you live elsewhere, expect changes when your local laws arrive.

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