Discord Announces Delay in Age Verification Policy Rollout

SAN FRANCISCO—Discord announced earlier this week that it will delay the rollout of age verification measures. Mandatory age verification for all users was planned to begin in March 2026, in a bid to implement "teen-by-default" settings globally across the popular message and VOIP social network and messaging app.

The enhanced teen safety feature rollout was intended to create "a safer and more inclusive experience for users over the age of 13," according to the platform's initial statement. Backlash was immediate.

Stanislav Vishnevskiy, Discord's chief technical officer, wrote in a February 24 blog post that his team was expecting the announcement of age verification requirements to be controversial. Vishnevskiy explained, "Any time you introduce something that touches identity and verification, people are going to have strong feelings.

"Rightfully so," he added. "In hindsight, we should have provided more detail about our intentions and how the process works.The way this landed, many of you walked away thinking we're requiring face scans and ID uploads from everyone just to use Discord. That's not what's happening, but the fact that so many people believe it tells us we failed at our most basic job: clearly explaining what we're doing and why. That's on us."

Without any evidence to prove this claim, Vishnevskiy said, "Over 90% of users will never need to verify their age to continue using Discord exactly as they do today.

"This is powered in part by our internal safety systems, which can already make an age determination for many adult users without any user action," Vishnevskiy shared. "We'll publish the methodology behind this in a technical blog post before we launch globally."

Under the "teen-by-default" policy, users will be required to complete age verification for channels and servers that are "age-restricted." Some of these channels include the platforms managed by adult content creators and online sex workers, as well as those housing other sexually related content, sexual animation, and fan communities.

Note that Discord previously experienced a data breach involving one of its age-verification vendors. The data breach involving a third-party vendor at the time exposed age-verification documentation, including government-issued identification cards.

This breach resulted from errors by a customer experience vendor, 5CA, which outsources functions to customer service agents in countries like the Philippines. K-ID is Discord's primary age-verification vendor, but the service indicated it had no role in the data loss associated with its standard age-verification processes.