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Are VPNs Legal in the UK? What the 2026 Social Media Ban Means

After the UK announced a social media ban for under-16s and rolled out age verification, VPN sign-ups surged. Are VPNs legal in the UK, will they be banned, and do they actually get around the new rules? An honest 2026 explainer.

By Eric Gerard · Editor · AnonymFlow4 min readPhoto via Pixabay

In 2026 the United Kingdom became one of the biggest stories in online privacy. After the Online Safety Act's age-verification rules took effect and the government announced a social media ban for under-16s on 15 June 2026, VPN sign-ups in the UK rocketed — Proton VPN reported a roughly 1,400% surge, with downloads climbing even faster over the rollout weekend. That left a lot of people asking the same questions: are VPNs even legal in the UK, will they be banned, and do they actually get around the new rules?

What actually changed in the UK

Two things, often confused. First, age verification: under the Online Safety Act, many sites now require proof of age — photo ID, a credit-card check or a biometric face scan — before granting access. Second, the newly announced ban on social media for under-16s, covering platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube and Snapchat, with protections expected to phase in from 2027.

Both push more identity-checking onto everyday browsing — which is exactly why privacy-minded adults reached for VPNs.

A person using a VPN app on a smartphone
A person using a VPN app on a smartphone

Where things stand (June 2026)

Despite the headlines, the UK has not announced a VPN ban. Reporting this month from outlets including TechRadar and Cybernews notes that while the age-verification rules pushed many adults toward VPNs, the government has not proposed banning them — and such a ban would be hard to enforce. For now, using a VPN in the UK remains fully legal; watch official guidance rather than headlines.

Yes. Using a VPN is entirely legal in the UK, and there is no current plan to change that. In late 2025 a technology minister told the House of Lords there were "no current plans to ban the use of VPNs," pointing to their many legitimate uses, and a blanket ban on the whole population has been ruled out. A VPN is a standard security tool — the same technology businesses use to protect remote workers. For the wider picture on where VPNs are and aren't allowed, see our guide on whether VPNs are legal.

What stays illegal is what you do: a VPN doesn't make fraud, piracy or accessing illegal material lawful. The tool is legal; misuse is not.

Will a VPN get around the new rules?

This is where honest expectations matter. A VPN changes the IP address a site sees, so it can affect location-based checks. But it cannot defeat identity-based age verification. If a platform checks age at the account, device, app-store, payment or ID level, a VPN does nothing — it doesn't turn a 15-year-old into a verified adult, create an aged account, or supply a credit card. Anyone promising a VPN "bypasses" the under-16 ban is overselling it.

What this means for you

If you're a UK adult who values privacy, a reputable VPN is a legal, sensible way to secure your connection and reduce how much you expose on public networks — that's its real job. Just choose a trustworthy, no-logs provider, and don't believe marketing that frames a VPN as a magic key to the new rules.

The bottom line

VPNs are legal in the UK, they aren't being banned, and they're a legitimate privacy tool that millions now use. They simply won't do the one thing some headlines imply — make identity-based age checks disappear. Use one for what it's actually good at: protecting your own privacy and security.

Going further. Related reading: Split Tunneling Explained, What Is a Proxy and What Is DNS.

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Frequently asked questions

Are VPNs legal in the UK?

Yes. Using a VPN is legal in the United Kingdom, and the government has said it has no current plans to ban them. VPNs have many legitimate uses — securing public Wi-Fi, protecting business traffic, and basic privacy — and a blanket ban on the whole population has been ruled out. What remains illegal is the underlying activity a VPN might be used for (fraud, piracy, accessing illegal content); the tool itself is lawful.

Will the UK ban VPNs because of the social media ban?

There is no current plan to do so. In late 2025 a UK technology minister told the House of Lords there were no plans to ban VPNs, citing their legitimate uses. The 2026 social media restrictions for under-16s and the age-verification rules target platforms and identity checks, not VPN software. That could be revisited in future, but as of 2026 VPNs remain legal and widely used in the UK.

Does a VPN get around UK age verification or the under-16 ban?

Not reliably. A VPN changes the IP address a website sees, which can affect location-based checks — but it does not make a 15-year-old appear 18. If age is verified at the account level, device level, app-store level, or through ID or a credit card, a VPN does nothing to defeat that, because it doesn't create a verified identity. Treat claims that a VPN 'bypasses' the ban with scepticism.

Why did VPN use surge in the UK?

When the UK's age-verification requirements took effect, many adults objected to handing over ID or a face scan just to use mainstream sites, and turned to VPNs for privacy. Proton VPN reported a roughly 1,400% jump in UK sign-ups around the rollout, with downloads spiking even higher over the launch weekend. The surge was driven mainly by privacy-conscious adults, not by people defeating the rules.