Every iPhone in Britain is now a checkpoint, and the price of entry for many is their ID or credit card.
KEN MACON
With iOS 26.4, Apple has turned every iPhone in the UK into an identity checkpoint. The update, released March 24, requires all UK users to confirm they’re 18 or older before accessing certain features and services on their Apple Account.
UK communications regulator Ofcom called it “a real win for children and families.”
The infrastructure being built is more of a problem than that framing suggests.
Apple has, without warning, placed a gatekeeper on the devices of 35 million UK users who paid good money for full-featured smartphones and now find themselves holding something closer to a supervised children’s tablet.
It’s a corporate ultimatum: hand over sensitive personal data or lose functionality you already paid for.
The verification prompt appears immediately after the update installs.
Apple checks whether your account already has a credit card linked or whether the account has existed long enough to establish you as an adult.
For many existing users, the process is essentially automatic. For everyone else, the options narrow quickly: link a credit card, scan a government-issued photo ID, or accept that your account defaults to teen restrictions, with Apple’s Web Content Filter and Communication Safety features switched on across all browsers and messaging apps and FaceTime, monitoring communications.
Web Content Filter blocks websites Apple classifies as explicit, operating across Safari and third-party browsers alike.
Communication Safety scans incoming and outgoing images and videos for nudity. Both activate silently for anyone who hasn’t cleared the adult threshold. Skip verification, or lack a credit card and a government ID, and Apple decides what you’re allowed to see.
Users without a credit card or government ID have no other path. Reports from UK users confirm it. Scan the card, upload the ID, or live with restricted access. The system doesn’t offer alternatives.
Ofcom praised the rollout in a statement, saying it had coordinated extensively with Apple and others on age assurance under the Online Safety Act: “Apple’s decision that the UK will be one of the first countries in the world to receive new child safety protections on devices is a real win for children and families…We’ve worked closely with Apple and other services to ensure they can be applied in a variety of contexts in order to ensure users are protected. This will build on the strong foundations of the Online Safety Act, from widespread age checks that keep young people away from harmful content, to blocking high-risk sites and stepping up action against child sexual abuse material.”
Notably, Apple wasn’t legally required to do this. The Online Safety Act’s age verification obligations apply to platforms and adult content sites, not to device operating systems or app stores. Apple chose to go further, and Ofcom chose to celebrate it.
The reality of the UK’s wider age verification push is that it hasn’t worked. VPN usage spiked dramatically when the Online Safety Act came into force, with NordVPN reporting a 1,000% increase in UK sign-ups and Proton VPN seeing 1,400% more in the first days after enforcement.
Some users bypass facial age-scanning on websites by holding a photo of an older person to the camera.
The UK isn’t the endpoint. Apple has been watching age verification legislation build momentum globally, with US federal pressure, state-level requirements beginning in Utah, and ongoing industry lobbying all pointing in the same direction. iOS 26.4 makes the UK a test case. The system designed here will likely expand if other jurisdictions get their way.
This article (Apple Forces UK iPhone Age Checks in iOS 26.4) was created and published by Reclaim the Net and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author Ken Macon

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