
AT&T has announced the Amigo Jr., a new Samsung-manufactured smartphone designed specifically for children as young as six, with an emphasis on safety, simplicity, and controlled communication. The device, unveiled through AT&T’s official press release, marks the company’s latest push into family-oriented tech solutions and arrives at a moment when parents are increasingly anxious about screen time, stranger contact, and unfiltered internet access.
The Amigo Jr. resembles a compact Samsung Android handset but comes heavily modified with a kid-specific interface, curated apps, and strict guardrails. Parents manage everything from an external dashboard – contacts, apps, screen limits, location settings – with no way for kids to disable features or bypass restrictions.
AT&T says the goal is to offer a phone that “lets kids connect safely while giving parents total confidence”
Under the hood, the phone includes 4G LTE connectivity, a simplified home screen, and a curated app store limited to essentials like messaging, photos, learning tools, and parent-approved games. AT&T also includes location tracking with real-time updates, geofence alerts, and emergency call shortcuts. The carrier emphasizes that the Amigo Jr. is not designed to be a fully featured smartphone but a stepping stone between a flip phone and a standard Android device.
This launch matters because it arrives at a time when major tech companies are being criticized for failing to protect minors online. With rising concern over social media exposure, cyberbullying, and inappropriate content, carriers are increasingly stepping in with hardware-level solutions instead of simply offering apps or parental control settings. AT&T’s strategy positions the Amigo Jr. as a safer alternative to giving a child an entry-level Android or iPhone and hoping parental controls hold.
For families, the value proposition is clear
A device that keeps children reachable and independent without giving them access to social media, open web browsing, or unfiltered app stores. Parents frustrated with the complexity of managing restrictions on mainstream smartphones may prefer a device engineered from the ground up with safety in mind.
The Amigo Jr. will be available starting February 7, sold through AT&T stores and online. Pricing is expected to land in the budget-friendly range, with AT&T offering installment plans and pairing options with existing family lines.
Looking ahead, industry analysts expect more carriers to release controlled smartphones as lawmakers continue pressing tech companies to apply stricter protections for minors. If the Amigo Jr. finds traction, AT&T may expand the lineup beyond a single device and introduce models for older kids or teens with graduated access tiers.
