Roblox parental controls and safety settings guide

Your kid is on Roblox right now. 80 million people log in daily, and most parents have no idea what their child can access, who they can chat with, or how much they can spend. Here’s the reality: Roblox parental controls got massive upgrades – mandatory facial age checks, a remote parent dashboard, AI-powered chat monitoring, spending caps – but none of it works unless you actually set it up.

This guide takes 10 minutes to follow. Every setting, every new feature, every practical tip – step by step, plain English, no tech jargon. Whether you’re configuring parental controls for the first time or updating settings from 2024, this is the only guide you need.

What Changed in Roblox Parental Controls

Roblox made more changes to parental controls in the last six months than in the previous two years combined. Here’s every major change at a glance:

FeatureWhat ChangedWhen It Rolled Out
Facial Age ChecksRequired for all chat access worldwide
Parent DashboardRedesigned with remote management from your own deviceQ1 2025 (expanded)
Content LabelsFour maturity tiers replace old age-based systemLate 2024 (refined 2025-2026)
Spending ControlsCustomizable notification thresholds + monthly caps2025-2026
Screen TimeDaily limits with automatic lockout2025
Chat DefaultsUnder-9 chat off by default; under-13 DMs restrictedQ1 2025
Roblox SentinelOpen-source AI for child endangerment detection2025
Global Parent Council32-country advisory group for parents
Trusted ConnectionsVerified contacts for cross-age communication2025-2026

If your last interaction with Roblox’s safety settings was in early 2025, you’re essentially looking at a different system now. Let’s break it all down.

Understanding Roblox’s Age System

Before we get into settings, you need to understand how Roblox handles age because everything else builds on this.

When your child creates a Roblox account, they enter a birthdate. That date determines what content they can access:

Age GroupContent AccessChat AccessSocial Features
Under 9Minimal and Mild onlyOff by default (parent can enable)Limited friend requests
9-12Minimal, Mild, some ModerateFiltered chat, restricted DMsStandard friend system
13-17Up to Moderate by defaultFiltered chat on, DMs enabledFull social features
18+All content including RestrictedOpen chat (still filtered)Full social features

Important: In the past, Roblox didn’t verify age beyond the birthdate entered at signup. A 10-year-old could enter a fake birthday and access mature content. The mandatory facial age checks now address this – the system can detect when a user’s actual age doesn’t match their account, and it overrides the restrictions accordingly. This is a big deal.

Setting Up Parental Controls Step by Step

Here’s the complete walkthrough. This takes about 15 minutes and it’s absolutely worth it.

Step 1: Create Your Own Parent Account

This is new and it’s the most important step. Instead of logging into your child’s device, you can now manage everything remotely.

  1. Download the Roblox app or go to roblox.com
  2. Create an account with your real information
  3. Go to Settings > Parental Controls
  4. Complete age verification (government ID or credit card)

Once verified, you unlock the full parent dashboard and remote management.

From the Parental Controls section of your verified account:

  1. Select Link Child Account
  2. Enter your child’s Roblox username
  3. Confirm the link (your child may need to approve on their end)
  4. You now have remote access to all their settings

This means you can adjust controls from your own phone while your kid is at school, playing at a friend’s house, or sitting right next to you. No more grabbing their device or guessing their password.

Step 3: Set a Parental PIN

If you haven’t set a PIN yet, do it now. Choose a PIN your child won’t guess – don’t use their birthday or 1234. This PIN prevents them from changing restricted settings on their own device. Guard it like you guard your banking password.

Step 4: Configure Account Restrictions

Under the Parental Controls tab, you’ll find the Account Restrictions toggle. When enabled:

  • Locks contact settings so only curated, pre-approved experiences are accessible
  • Disables free-form chat – your child can only use pre-selected safe phrases
  • Blocks access to social features like group walls and forums
  • Restricts the experience list to developer-verified, age-appropriate games

This is the nuclear option – great for very young kids (under 8). Most kids aged 9-12 will find it overly restrictive, so for older kids it’s better to configure the individual settings below.

Step 5: Review Every Setting in the Dashboard

Once linked, go through each section:

  • Content access: Check what maturity levels your child can access
  • Communication: Review chat permissions and messaging restrictions
  • Spending: Set your monthly cap and notification preferences
  • Screen time: Configure daily limits
  • Blocked experiences: Add any specific games you want blocked
  • Friend list: Review who your child is connected with

We’ll cover each of these in detail throughout this guide.

Mandatory Facial Age Checks

This is the single biggest parental controls update Roblox has ever made. Starting, every Roblox user worldwide must complete a facial age estimation check before they can access chat features. Roblox is the first major gaming platform to require this.

Here’s how it works:

  1. The user opens their device camera through the Roblox app
  2. A quick facial scan estimates the user’s age
  3. Users 13 and older can alternatively verify through a government-issued ID
  4. The scan is processed by a third-party vendor called Persona
  5. All images and video are deleted immediately after processing – nothing is stored

What this means for your child: If your kid is under 13, the system will detect that and apply the appropriate restrictions automatically. If your teen previously lied about their age, the facial check may now override that.

What this means for you: You don’t need to do anything to enable this – it’s mandatory. But your child might come to you confused about why they suddenly can’t chat the way they used to. That’s the age check doing its job.

The rollout started in Australia, New Zealand, and the Netherlands in 2025, then expanded globally. If your child plays Roblox, this is already active on their account. For more on how age verification connects with voice chat, see our voice chat and age check guide.

The Redesigned Parent Dashboard

The old setup required you to log into your child’s account on their device and change settings while hovering over their shoulder. The parent dashboard fixes this entirely.

Remote Management

Link your own verified Roblox account to your child’s account and manage everything from your own phone or computer. Adjust chat settings during your lunch break. Check spending history while your kid is at school. No device-swapping required.

Activity Insights

The dashboard shows you:

  • Screen time data – how long your child plays each day and which days they’re most active
  • Friend list – who they’re connected with on the platform
  • Experience history – which games they’ve been playing recently
  • Chat activity – limited visibility into communication patterns (not full transcripts, but flagged content alerts)
  • Spending history – every Robux transaction and subscription charge

Blocked Experiences

You can search for specific Roblox experiences by name and block them individually. Even if your child’s age settings would normally allow access, a blocked experience is completely inaccessible. This is useful for games you’ve heard about from other parents or seen in the news that you’re not comfortable with.

Email Notifications

Enable email notifications in Account Settings. Roblox will email you when:

  • A new device logs into the account
  • The account password is changed
  • A purchase is made
  • Parental controls settings are modified

Content Maturity Labels

Roblox no longer uses a simple age-based content system. Experiences are now labeled by maturity level using four categories:

Content LabelDescriptionDefault Access
MinimalSuitable for all players, no violence or mature themesAll ages
MildLight fantasy violence, minimal conflictAll ages
ModerateModerate violence, some intensity13+ by default
RestrictedIntense themes, strong violence17+ and ID-verified only

What’s Different from the Old System

Previously, Roblox used age categories (All Ages, 9+, 13+, 17+). The new labels describe the actual content rather than slapping an age number on it. This gives you much better information about what your child will actually see.

Default Restrictions by Age

  • Under 9: Can only access Minimal and Mild content
  • 9-12: Can access Minimal, Mild, and some Moderate content (parent-configurable)
  • 13-17: Can access up to Moderate content by default
  • 18+ verified: Can access all content including Restricted

Parent Override

Regardless of your child’s age, you can tighten these settings through the dashboard. If your 11-year-old has access to Mild content but you’d rather they only see Minimal, you can lock that down. You can also block specific experiences individually for granular control.

Enhanced Spending and Screen Time Controls

Money and time – the two things parents worry about most with any gaming platform. Roblox upgraded both.

Spending Controls

The spending controls now include:

  • Monthly spending cap: Set a hard dollar limit per month. Once reached, all purchases are blocked until the next billing cycle
  • Transaction notifications: Choose to get notified for every single purchase, only when spending hits a high threshold, or both
  • Subscription visibility: See all active experience subscriptions your child has, not just one-time Robux purchases
  • Purchase history: Full transaction log accessible from the parent dashboard

Pro tip: Set the monthly cap AND enable per-transaction notifications. The cap protects your wallet, and the notifications show you what your child is actually buying. Some experiences push in-game purchases aggressively – knowing which games drain Robux helps you have better conversations about spending.

Additional Spending Protection Layers

  1. Remove payment methods from the Roblox account entirely. Only add one temporarily for approved purchases.
  2. Disable in-app purchases on the device:
  • iPhone/iPad: Settings > Screen Time > Content & Privacy > iTunes & App Store Purchases > In-App Purchases > Don’t Allow
  • Android: Google Play > Settings > Authentication > Require authentication for purchases
  • Xbox: Settings > Account > Privacy & Online Safety > Spending limits
  • PC: Remove saved payment info from the Roblox website
  1. Use Roblox gift cards instead of linked credit/debit cards. Buy a $10 or $25 gift card, let your child redeem it, and that’s their budget. When it’s gone, it’s gone. This teaches budgeting too. Bonus: our avatar shop hacks guide shows kids how to look great on Roblox without spending much at all.

Screen Time Controls

Daily screen time limits are now built directly into Roblox:

  • Set daily limits in hours and minutes (e.g., 2 hours on weekdays, 3 hours on weekends)
  • Automatic lockout when the limit is reached – the game session ends
  • Override option available with the parental PIN if you want to grant extra time
  • Screen time data visible in the parent dashboard so you can track patterns

The screen time system works at the platform level, so it applies across all Roblox experiences. Your child can’t bypass it by switching games. For a deeper dive on managing time and money, check our screen time and spending limits guide.

Chat Safety Features

Chat has always been the most controversial part of Roblox for parents. The updates make meaningful improvements.

Default Chat Restrictions by Age

Age GroupChat in ExperiencesDirect MessagesWho They Can Chat With
Under 9Off by default (parent can enable)DisabledN/A unless parent enables
9-12Filtered chat onRestrictedSame age group, Trusted Connections
13-17Filtered chat onEnabledSame age group, Trusted Connections
18+Open chat (still filtered)EnabledAll verified users

Configuring Chat Manually

If you want finer control, go to Settings > Privacy and adjust who your child can communicate with:

SettingOptionsRecommended (Under 13)
Who can chat with me in-appEveryone / Friends / No OneFriends
Who can chat with me in experienceEveryone / Friends / No OneFriends
Who can message meEveryone / Friends / No OneFriends
Who can invite me to VIP serversEveryone / Friends / No OneFriends

Setting everything to Friends is the sweet spot for most families. Your child can communicate with people they’ve accepted as friends, but strangers can’t reach them.

Trusted Connections

This newer system controls who your child can communicate with across age groups. By default, minors cannot chat with adults. The exception is Trusted Connections – verified contacts that both parties have approved. This is designed for situations like a parent who also plays Roblox, or an older sibling.

Roblox Sentinel AI

Launched in 2025, Roblox Sentinel is an open-source AI system designed to detect early signals of child endangerment in chat. It analyzes conversation patterns – not just individual words – to flag concerning behavior before it escalates. It runs in the background and doesn’t require any setup from you.

Roblox also improved its voice chat filters to capture intonation and vocal patterns, not just words. This catches threatening or inappropriate voice communication that text filters miss. Image sharing remains disabled in chat, and systems proactively block attempts to exchange personal information between users who aren’t Trusted Connections.

Monitoring Your Child’s Activity

Setting controls is step one. Monitoring is step two.

Using the Dashboard

Make it a habit to check the parent dashboard weekly. Five minutes reviewing screen time, spending, and friend activity tells you a lot. Look for patterns – a sudden spike in Robux spending, a new friend from an unknown account, or unusually long play sessions can all be worth a conversation.

Regular Check-Ins

Technology isn’t a substitute for conversation. The most effective thing you can do is periodically sit with your child and watch them play. Ask about the games they enjoy, who they play with, and whether anyone has made them uncomfortable. Make it casual, not interrogative.

Adjust as they grow. A setup that works for your 8-year-old will frustrate your 12-year-old. Revisit settings every few months and gradually expand access as your child demonstrates responsibility. Keep an eye on our Roblox events calendar to know what your kids might be playing each month.

Age-Appropriate Game Recommendations

Not sure which Roblox games are appropriate for your child? Here are our picks by age group:

Ages 6-9

  • Adopt Me – Pet adoption and home decoration. Very wholesome and social.
  • MeepCity – Safe social hangout with mini-games.
  • Natural Disaster Survival – Simple, funny, no combat. Just survive goofy disasters.
  • Work at a Pizza Place – Role-play game where you run a pizza restaurant.

Ages 10-12

  • Pet Simulator 99 – Collecting and trading with a vibrant community. Grab codes from our PS99 codes page.
  • Grow A Garden – Relaxing gardening simulator with trading. See our Grow A Garden guide.
  • Dress to Impress – Creative fashion game, very popular with this age group.
  • Fisch – Peaceful fishing game with progression. Check our Fisch guide.

Ages 13+

  • Blox Fruits – Action RPG with cartoon violence, nothing graphic. See our Blox Fruits codes.
  • Doors – Horror game, more spooky than scary. Jump scares, no gore.
  • Arsenal – First-person shooter with cartoony graphics.
  • Jujutsu Shenanigans – Anime-based fighting game. See our JS guide.

For a full ranked list, check out our best Roblox games tier list. Teens looking for something different should also explore our hidden gem Roblox games – underrated titles with smaller, safer communities.

How to Talk to Your Kids About Online Safety

Settings and controls are important, but they’re not foolproof. Open conversations matter just as much.

The Big Rules

  1. Never share personal information – Real name, school name, address, phone number, or photos should never be shared with online strangers
  2. Never click links from strangers – Scammers send links that look like Roblox pages but steal account credentials
  3. Tell a parent if something feels wrong – If someone says something uncomfortable, asks to move to a different platform, or makes them feel unsafe, they should tell you immediately without fear of getting in trouble
  4. Real friends don’t ask for your password – No matter what someone promises (free Robux, rare items), giving out your password is always a scam
  5. It’s okay to block and report – Blocking someone isn’t mean. It’s a safety tool

Recognizing Scams

Roblox scams targeting kids are common. Teach your child to recognize:

  • “Free Robux” websites – These are always scams. Roblox never gives free Robux through external sites. See our article on how to actually get free Robux legitimately.
  • “Give me your account to add items” – Nobody can add items by logging into your account. This is theft.
  • “Click this link for a prize” – Phishing links that steal credentials
  • “Trade me this item, I’ll give you something better on my other account” – Classic cross-trade scam

For more on staying safe while trading, check our Roblox trading guide.

What Roblox Does to Protect Kids

It’s worth knowing what Roblox does on their end because they’ve invested heavily:

  • AI chat filtering – All messages pass through an AI filter that blocks inappropriate language, personal information sharing, and grooming patterns
  • Roblox Sentinel – Open-source AI that detects early signals of child endangerment by analyzing conversation patterns, not just individual words
  • Human moderation team – Thousands of moderators review reports and flagged content
  • Content maturity labels – All experiences rated and categorized by content type
  • Mandatory facial age checks – Every user verified before accessing chat features
  • ID verification for Restricted content – Adults must verify identity to access or create mature-rated experiences
  • Global Parent Council – 32-country advisory group of parents and caregivers shaping safety policies
  • Regular transparency reports – Roblox publishes quarterly reports on moderation actions

Reporting Mechanisms

If your child encounters something inappropriate, here’s how to report it:

  1. In-game: Press Escape > Report tab > Select the issue > Submit
  2. From a profile: Visit the offending user’s profile > Click the three dots > Report
  3. Roblox Support: .help.roblox.com for serious concerns
  4. National Center for Missing & Exploited Children: If you suspect predatory behavior, report to NCMEC at CyberTipline.org in addition to Roblox

Roblox takes reports seriously and typically responds within 24-48 hours for standard reports, faster for urgent safety concerns.

2025 vs Parental Controls Comparison

Here’s a side-by-side comparison so you can see exactly what improved:

Feature2025 (Early)(Current)
Age VerificationOptional ID check for 17+ contentMandatory facial age estimation for all chat
Parent DashboardBasic, required child’s deviceFull remote management from your device
Content RatingAge-based (All Ages, 9+, 13+, 17+)Maturity-based (Minimal, Mild, Moderate, Restricted)
Chat for Under 9Restricted phrasesOff by default, parent consent required
DMs Under 13Filtered but availableRestricted by default
Spending AlertsBasic notificationsCustomizable thresholds + per-transaction alerts
Screen TimeManual monitoring onlyDaily limits with automatic lockout
AI SafetyBasic text filtersRoblox Sentinel + improved voice filters
Cross-Age ChatFiltered but allowedBlocked unless Trusted Connections approved
Parent InputFeedback formsGlobal Parent Council (32 countries)

The difference is significant. If you configured your child’s account in early 2025, it’s worth going through every setting again.

What’s Still Coming: Roadmap

Roblox hasn’t stopped building. Based on their public communications and the roadmap update, here’s what’s in development:

Real-time suspicious chat alerts. According to survey data, 66% of parents said real-time alerts when suspicious chat is detected would most improve their confidence. Roblox is actively working on this.

Expanded AI moderation. Sentinel is still being improved with better detection of grooming patterns, coded language, and off-platform contact attempts. The open-source nature means external researchers contribute improvements too.

Deeper device integration. Roblox is working on tighter integration with iOS and Android device-level parental controls, so your phone’s screen time settings and Roblox’s built-in limits work together.

Broader Trusted Connections. The feature will expand to include more relationship types and verification methods, making it easier for families to communicate safely across age groups.

Parent education resources. The Global Parent Council launched with caregivers from 32 countries. Their input will shape onboarding flows and educational resources for parents new to Roblox.

FAQ

Is Roblox safe for kids?

With proper setup, yes. Roblox now requires facial age checks for chat, has a remote parent dashboard, AI-powered chat monitoring through Sentinel, and stricter defaults for under-13 accounts. The key is spending 15 minutes configuring parental controls and having open conversations about online safety.

What changed in Roblox parental controls?

The biggest changes include mandatory facial age checks for chat access, a redesigned parent dashboard with remote management, new spending notification options, daily screen time limits with automatic lockout, content maturity labels replacing old age ratings, and stricter default communication settings for users under 13.

Are facial age checks required on Roblox now?

Yes. As of, every user worldwide must complete a facial age estimation check before accessing chat. Users 13 and older can also verify through government-issued ID. The scan is processed by vendor Persona and deleted immediately after.

Can I manage my child’s Roblox account from my own device?

Yes. The redesigned parent dashboard lets you link your verified account to your child’s account and manage all parental controls remotely. You can adjust chat, spending, screen time, and content access from your own phone or computer.

How do I set spending limits on Roblox?

Go to the parent dashboard and set a monthly spending cap. You can also enable per-transaction notifications, view all subscription charges, and review full purchase history. For extra protection, use Roblox gift cards instead of linked payment methods.

What are Roblox content maturity labels?

Roblox labels experiences by maturity level: Minimal, Mild, Moderate, and Restricted. This replaced the old age-based system. Users under 9 access Minimal and Mild by default. Parents can further restrict content through the dashboard regardless of the child’s age.

Can kids under 13 use chat on Roblox?

Users under 9 have chat turned off by default unless a parent provides consent after an age check. Users aged 9-12 get filtered chat with restricted DMs. All chat between minors and adults is blocked unless they are verified Trusted Connections.

How do I set screen time limits on Roblox?

In the parent dashboard, go to Screen Time and set a daily limit in hours and minutes. When the limit is reached, Roblox automatically locks the child out for the day. Override at any time with your parental PIN.

How do I report inappropriate content on Roblox?

In any experience, press the Roblox menu (Escape on PC), click Report, select the issue, and submit. You can also report from a player’s profile page. For serious concerns, contact Roblox Support at.help.roblox.com or report to NCMEC at CyberTipline.org.

What safety features is Roblox still working on?

Roblox is developing real-time suspicious chat alerts, expanded AI moderation through Sentinel, broader Trusted Connections, deeper integration with iOS and Android device-level controls, and parent education resources through the Global Parent Council.