Discord announced new default settings on February 9 to enhance age-appropriate experiences, set to implement in March. The 'teen-by-default' policy requires age verification for accessing sensitive content and features. Users have expressed concerns over privacy and potential data breaches.
On February 9, 2026, Discord, a popular voice chat and messaging platform with over 200 million monthly active users as of 2025, announced changes to its settings. These will take effect in March for all users worldwide, expanding beyond initial tests in the United Kingdom and Australia. The goal is to protect new and existing users from age-restricted sections of Discord servers and prevent victimization by malicious individuals.
According to the announcement, 'New and existing Discord users globally will be assigned new default settings that support age-appropriate experiences while keeping privacy front and center.' Under the new system, users need age assurance as adults to unblur sensitive content or disable the setting. Only age-assured adults can access age-restricted channels, servers, and app commands. Direct messages from unknown contacts are routed to a separate inbox, modifiable only by adults. There are warning prompts for friend requests from strangers, and only adults may speak on stage channels in servers.
While well-intentioned, users have complained about the restrictions and the age verification process. Initially, many believed all users would need to submit ID or a selfie video to a third-party verifier. Discord clarified that most adults won't require this, using AI-enabled age prediction to confirm adulthood confidently. However, concerns persist over data security, especially after an October 2025 incident where a third-party vendor was hacked, exposing government-ID photos of about 70,000 users.
Discord states it only receives a user's age, facial scans never leave the device, and IDs are deleted after use for age determination. Doubts linger due to the prior breach. Additionally, reports mention a browser-based tool that bypasses verification using a fake 3D avatar, highlighting potential vulnerabilities in the system.