Discord is rolling out a sweeping safety update that will shift any account without a confirmed age into a teen experience by default. If you haven’t verified you’re an adult, you’ll be placed on stricter controls and lose access to mature communities and media until you complete verification. The change applies to both new and existing users and is expected to reach Discord’s global audience of more than 200 million people.
What Changes For Unverified Accounts Under Teen Defaults
Unverified users will be treated as teens by default. That means communities marked as mature or age-gated will be off-limits until you prove you’re an adult. Sensitive photos and videos will be blurred automatically, and you won’t be able to reveal them without adult verification.

Direct messages and social features will also tighten up. Messages from people you haven’t interacted with will be routed to a separate requests inbox, friend requests from unfamiliar accounts will carry stronger warnings, and recommendation surfaces are expected to be more conservative. These guardrails mirror Discord’s existing teen safety model in places like Australia and the UK, now expanded globally.
Server moderators should expect more prominent age gates on channels hosting mature discussions or media. For users, the practical impact is simple: if your age isn’t confirmed as 18+, assume you’ll see fewer invites, fewer potentially sensitive previews, and more prompts designed to reduce contact from strangers.
How Adult Verification Will Work On Discord
Discord says adults will have two primary paths to restore full access. First, a facial age estimation option that requires a quick video selfie. This approach assesses age characteristics from the video but, according to Discord, is processed on-device, which reduces the amount of personal data transmitted.
The second option is traditional identity verification using a government-issued ID handled by approved third-party partners. Discord indicates these partners are required to delete documentation quickly—many immediately after confirming age—and that it is exploring additional methods to offer more choice.
In practical terms, the video selfie will likely be the fastest and least intrusive route for most adults, while ID upload may be necessary for edge cases where the model can’t confidently assess age. Teens who verify as under 18 will remain in the teen experience.
Safety Tradeoffs And Privacy Questions Around Age Checks
Stronger defaults for teens are a clear win for safety advocates who have long pushed platforms to limit unsolicited contact and blur sensitive media for minors by default. The UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office, through its Age-Appropriate Design Code, has urged platforms to design with children’s best interests in mind, and Discord’s move aligns with that direction.

Privacy, however, remains the central concern with any age check. Last year, a Discord-related breach exposed roughly 70,000 government IDs through a third-party service, according to disclosures reported at the time. Discord says it reviewed and hardened controls following the incident. Even so, privacy groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation have warned that ID-based checks can create tempting targets for attackers and risk chilling anonymous speech if not carefully scoped.
That tension explains the push toward facial age estimation: it can confirm adulthood without storing an identity document. The technique is not foolproof—good lighting, camera quality, and edge cases like youthful-looking adults can affect results—but it’s generally viewed as more privacy-preserving than centralized ID databases.
Why Discord Is Doing This Now Across Its Platform
Discord has evolved from a gamer chat app into a mainstream communications platform with massive youth adoption. Regulators in multiple regions are pressing for default protections for minors, while civil society groups and researchers continue to document harms from unsolicited contact, grooming, and exposure to adult content on open social networks. By making teen settings the default unless proven otherwise, Discord is effectively inverting the burden of proof: adulthood must be demonstrated, not simply declared.
Other platforms have taken similar steps—Instagram reduces message requests from unknown adults to teens, YouTube restricts some features for younger users—signaling an industry consensus around “safety by default.” Discord’s plan extends that logic across its sprawling server ecosystem.
What Users And Parents Should Do Now Before Rollout
Adults who rely on access to mature servers should prepare to verify promptly. Make sure your app is updated, review the verification options, and choose the path that best fits your privacy comfort level. If you’re a server owner or moderator, audit channels that feature mature themes or media and ensure age gates and content filters are correctly configured before the rollout.
Parents and guardians should treat this shift as a chance to review safety settings with teens. Confirm that direct message filters and friend request controls are enabled, talk through how message requests work, and remind teens not to share personal information with strangers. Discord’s Safety Center provides step-by-step guides for families and educators.
The bottom line is straightforward: if you’re not age-verified, you’ll be treated as a teen account soon. The change favors safety and aligns with broader regulatory and industry trends, but it also raises reasonable questions about verification data. Choosing the least data-intensive option—and verifying early—will make the transition smoother.
