SAFE for Kids Act
Issue: Age Verification
Latest Action: Announced on June 10, 2026
The SAFE for Kids Act is a federal bill that would require websites with more than 1/3 “sexual material harmful to minors” (as determined by the FTC) to verify the age of users.
Age verification mechanisms allowed:
- commercial age verification systems
- “digital identification” – the definition seems to include any data that serves as a “reasonable indication” of age, such as a mobile driver’s license, existing age credential, device-level age signal, etc.
Enforcement:
- FTC enforcement: violations are treated as unfair or deceptive practices under the FTC Act, which can pursue civil penalties.
- DOJ criminal enforcement: “knowing” violations are punishable by exorbitant fines and up to 5 years in prison.
- Private right of action: any person (not just parents or guardians of minors) can sue for compensatory damages, punitive damages, and attorney's fees.
Important differences from most AV bills:
- The 1/3 determination is made by the FTC, not courts or self-assessment by websites. It's unclear how or when the agency would make these determinations
- "Covered commercial entity" expressly includes officers, directors, and employees personally while performing their duties – this means that individual company executives face fines and prison for lack of compliance.
More Info
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