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Layer 2 of 7 — you are here

Last verified: July 7, 2026

Every protection in Layers 3 through 5 hangs off one fact: the platform knows this account belongs to a child of a specific age. Day Two makes that true. If your kid is currently using an adult account, a shared account, or an account with a made-up birthday, today is the day we fix it — and yes, it can be fixed without losing their stuff.

The real-birthday rule Never falsify a birthday. Age drives every protection the platform offers — content ratings, purchase controls, app defaults, what strangers can send them. A fake "adult" birthday turns all of it off, and both Apple and Google make it deliberately hard to lower an age later.

Apple: Family Sharing + child Apple IDs

Set up the family group

  1. On a parent iPhone: Settings → [your name] → Family (older iOS: Settings → [your name] → Family Sharing). Tap the add-member button.
  2. Invite the second parent first. Then tap their name in the family list and choose Set as Parent/Guardian (only the organizer can do this) — it lets them approve purchase and screen-time requests too. Both parents should be guardians; a one-guardian family has a single point of failure.

Create a NEW child Apple ID

  1. Settings → Family → add member → Create Child Account.
  2. Enter the child's real birthday. This is the moment the real-birthday rule matters most — everything downstream keys off it.
  3. Follow the consent step — Apple verifies parental consent for under-13 accounts with your payment card's security code, or a driver's license/state ID stored in Wallet where available.
  4. Accept the default that the child's account can't leave the family group without parent approval.

Convert an EXISTING account to a child account

If your kid already has an Apple ID with a fake birthday: don't create a new account and abandon the old one — their purchases, messages, and game progress live on it. Fix the account itself.

  1. Add the child's existing Apple ID to your family group (Settings → Family → add member → invite their address).
  2. Then correct the birthdate — on the child's signed-in device or at account.apple.com under personal information. Moving a birthdate down below 13 is gated, not forbidden: the account must already be in your family group, and you as the organizer approve the change (Apple walks you through its Parent Privacy Disclosure and verifies with your payment card's security code). One warning: once a birthdate is set to under 13, Apple won't let it be edited again — get it right.
  3. Once the account is recognized as a child account inside your family, all child protections apply to it exactly as if you'd created it fresh.

Turn on Ask to Buy

  1. Settings → Family → [child's name] → Ask To Buy → turn on. It's on by default for kids under 13 — and in some states and countries it's now mandatory (can't be turned off) for anyone under 18. Verify anyway.
  2. Now test it. On the child's device, try to download any free app. A notification should land on the parent phone asking for approval. If no request arrives, Ask to Buy is not actually working — troubleshoot before moving on. The test is the setup.

Google: Family Link

Set up the family group

  1. Install the Google Family Link app on the parent phone (iPhone or Android — the parent side works on both).
  2. Create your family group from the app (whoever creates it is the family manager), then add the second parent and give them the parent role in family settings — both roles can approve Family Link requests and manage supervision.

Create a NEW child Google account

  1. In Family Link: add child → Create account for a child. Or do it during setup of a new Android device — it offers the same flow.
  2. Real birthday. Same rule, same reason.
  3. Complete the parental-consent step — in the US, Google verifies with a payment card via a temporary authorization hold, not a charge (it drops off within a couple of days).

Convert an EXISTING Google account to supervised

  1. Supervision setup starts on the child's device, not in your Family Link app: child's device → Settings → Google → All services → Parental controls → "Let's do this" → choose their account, then a parent signs in to confirm. The child consents on their device, so do it together. (Chromebook: Settings → Accounts → Parental controls.)
  2. If the account has a fake adult birthday: correct the birthday first (myaccount.google.com → Personal info → Birthday). When a correction moves an account into under-13 territory, Google gives it 14 days to come under parental supervision before the account is disabled — so do the supervision setup the same day, not "this weekend."
  3. For teens (13+), supervision can still be added — and under Google's current rules, a child under 18 needs a parent's approval to stop supervision (both of you are notified if it ends). The account layer holds better for teens than it used to; it's still a trust structure, so pair it with the conversation.

Purchase approvals on Google

  1. Family Link → [child] → Controls → Google Play → under Purchases & download approvals, set Require approval for to All content. (The other options — paid only, in-app only — leave gaps; start strict.)
  2. Test it the same way: have the child's device attempt a free-app install and watch the approval request arrive on the parent phone.
Family Link web dashboard for a child account (photo and email redacted) showing the Controls list: Google Play app approvals and restrictions, YouTube, Google Chrome and Web, Google Search, Block or limit apps, Gemini, and Google Assistant.
The Family Link controls hub for one of our kids (identity blacked out). Purchase approvals live under the first row — Google Play → App approvals & restrictions.

Email consolidation + the dead email rule

Day Two is also the day you clean up the account sprawl the Inventory exposed. Old email addresses are unlocked doors: password resets for current accounts flow through them.

Done when

Next: Day Three — The Devices →