Roblox is making a major shift in how younger players use its platform — and it’s clearly a response to growing global pressure around child safety.
The company has announced a new system of age-based accounts designed to limit exposure, tighten controls, and rebuild trust after years of criticism.
Two New Account Types For Young Players
Starting early June, Roblox will roll out two distinct account categories:
- “Roblox Kids” for users aged 5 to 8
- “Roblox Select” for users aged 9 to 15
These accounts will be assigned using age verification or parental confirmation, meaning younger users will no longer have the same access as older players by default.
This isn’t just a small tweak — it’s a structural change in how the platform handles minors.
Stricter Content, Limited Access
For “Kids” accounts, Roblox is locking things down hard.
Content will be filtered based on strict maturity guidelines, and only games that pass a detailed three-step review process will be allowed. Developers will now need to verify their identity, enable two-factor authentication, and meet additional platform requirements to even qualify.
On top of that, chat — one of the biggest areas of concern — will be turned off by default for younger users.
For “Select” accounts, features like chat will be introduced gradually, depending on age, giving Roblox more control over how users interact.
Why Roblox Is Making This Move Now
This update didn’t come out of nowhere.
Over the past few years, Roblox has faced heavy scrutiny from regulators and safety groups worldwide over allegations that it failed to adequately protect children from harmful content and online predators.
These new measures are clearly aimed at addressing those concerns — and showing that the company is taking responsibility.
Business Side: Subscription Push Also Coming
Alongside safety updates, Roblox is also expanding its monetisation strategy.
A new subscription plan, priced at $4.99 per month, is set to launch on April 30. It will offer perks like discounts on in-game purchases and added platform benefits.
It’s a parallel move — improve safety on one side, strengthen revenue streams on the other.
What This Means Going Forward
This is one of Roblox’s biggest policy shifts in years.
If implemented properly, it could reshape how younger audiences experience the platform — making it more controlled, safer, and less open-ended than before.
But the real test won’t be the announcement.
It’ll be whether these changes actually fix the problems that led to this moment in the first place.
