
TL;DR
New Zealand’s government has ruled out banning or restricting VPNs as part of its planned under-16 social media ban, after PM Christopher Luxon and Education Minister Erica Stanford moved to quell a fierce privacy backlash. The idea surfaced via a report that Stanford had floated VPN restrictions; ministers now say it was never on the table, though coalition partner NZ First warned an early proposal could have led to VPN limits and digital IDs. The episode mirrors a global tension between age-verification laws and encryption tools.
The New Zealand government has ruled out restricting or banning VPNs as part of its planned under-16 social media ban. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Education Minister Erica Stanford both moved to kill the idea after a rapid privacy backlash, TechRadar reports.
“I can reject that outright. There’s no plan to ban VPNs at all,” Luxon told reporters.
Stanford’s office followed up to say the government is “not looking at restricting or banning VPNs”.
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The row began with a report in The Post that Stanford had floated VPN restrictions as part of the ban. Because a VPN can mask a user’s location and slip past network blocks, some officials reportedly saw it as a threat to enforcing age checks.
Accounts of how serious the idea ever was now diverge. Stanford says a ban was never considered, according to Stuff, though coalition partner NZ First reportedly warned an early proposal could have opened the door to VPN limits and digital IDs.
A red line, quickly drawn
Whatever the intent, the reaction was swift and cross-partisan. Coalition partner ACT reportedly treated any anti-encryption measure as a strict red line, and the Free Speech Union called the concept “censorship infrastructure” rather than child protection.
The pushback landed because VPNs are not merely a teenager’s workaround. They are everyday security tools for businesses, journalists, and ordinary people guarding data from hackers, ISPs, and surveillance.
New Zealand’s under-16 ban is still being finalised, part of a wave of similar laws worldwide. The country was weighing its options as neighbours and allies pressed ahead with their own age-gating regimes.
VPNs keep landing in the crosshairs
The episode is a smaller echo of a fight playing out globally. The UK’s own under-16 ban has drawn warnings that parallel plans to curb children’s VPN use would force intrusive age checks on adults too.
The pattern repeats across borders, from proposals that could see EU lawmakers bar under-16s from major platforms to Greece’s planned under-15 ban. In each case, VPNs surface as both the obvious loophole and a line regulators are wary of crossing.
Enforcement is the recurring stumbling block, as even Australia’s pioneering ban has struggled to work as intended. Age verification has redrawn the internet, and governments are still hunting for borders that hold.
For now, New Zealanders keep their VPNs, and privacy advocates have their win. The harder question, how to police a teen ban without weakening everyone else’s security, remains stubbornly unanswered.