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Early School-Age

Sharenting: What Every Parent Needs to Know About Privacy Risks

Sharenting (sharing content about your children on social media) creates a permanent digital footprint before your child can consent, and the risks range from identity theft to long-term psychological harm.

By Whimsical Pris 17 min read
Sharenting: What Every Parent Needs to Know About Privacy Risks
In this article

More than 80 percent of children in Western countries have a social media presence before they turn two years old, according to research cited by the UK Children's Commissioner. By the time your five-year-old straps on their first school backpack, hundreds of photos, videos, and captions have already told the internet who they are, where they live, and what they look like. Most of those posts were made with love and zero harmful intent. That is precisely what makes sharenting so complicated.

This article will help you understand:

What sharenting actually is and how it has evolved
The concrete privacy and safety risks specific to school-age children
The psychological effects on 5–8 year olds who are old enough to notice
Why parents share, and the social pressures that make stopping hard
A practical framework for deciding what is, and is not, acceptable to post

1. What Sharenting Really Means in 2026

Sharenting is not simply posting a cute photo once in a while. The term, a blend of "sharing" and "parenting," describes the habitual, ongoing publication of children's images, locations, routines, and personal milestones on social media platforms by their caregivers. What began as digital scrapbooking on early Facebook has evolved into a multi-platform practice spanning Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube family channels, and WhatsApp group chats that are far less private than parents assume.

From family album to public record

A key distinction worth making early: a photo sent to six grandparents in a group chat is sharenting in a technical sense, but its risk profile looks very different from a public TikTok tagging your daughter's school. The risks scale with audience size, platform settings, content specificity, and frequency of posting.

For children aged 5–8, the stakes shift in a specific way. These children are in school, which means their faces, first names, and often their school names appear regularly in photos. They are also old enough to feel embarrassed, proud, or violated by what you post. Understanding why this age group struggles with emotions helps explain why seeing themselves mocked in a comment section can hit differently than you might expect.

2. The Digital Footprint: Real Numbers, Real Consequences

Your child's digital footprint is already substantial, and it is growing without their knowledge or consent. The UK Children's Commissioner's 2018 report "Who Knows What About Me?" estimated that by age 13, the average child has approximately 1,300 photos and videos posted online by parents and family members. That number has almost certainly increased since then, given the growth of short-form video.

Identity theft starts younger than you think

The US Federal Trade Commission's Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule (COPPA) exists precisely because children's data is valuable and vulnerable. COPPA Regulation Guide covers what data platforms are legally prevented from collecting from under-13s, but it does not prevent parents from voluntarily broadcasting that same information themselves.

Personal details shared casually across posts, including full names, birth dates, schools, neighbourhoods, and even pet names (a common password recovery question), can be aggregated by bad actors. A 2018 report by Barclays Bank (UK) projected that by 2030, sharenting-related data would be implicated in two-thirds of identity fraud cases targeting young people.

Location data is hiding in plain sight

Even without explicitly tagging a location, school uniforms, playground equipment, street signs visible in the background, and even distinctive indoor furniture can narrow a child's location to a small geographic radius. Tools like How to Be Invisible walk through exactly how much information a determined person can extract from seemingly innocent photos.

3. Psychological Effects on 5–8 Year Olds

Children in the 5–8 range are concrete thinkers who are beginning to form a stable sense of identity, social comparison, and peer reputation. This developmental window makes them uniquely sensitive to how they are presented to the world.

The consent conversation they're ready to have

Most children this age can understand, in simple terms, that a photo posted online can be seen by people they do not know and cannot be easily taken back. Research in child development consistently shows that autonomy over personal image is linked to self-esteem and trust in caregivers. When parents override a child's "please don't post that," the message received is that the parent's social audience matters more than the child's comfort.

Self-consciousness and the camera effect

Children who grow up knowing they are frequently photographed for public audiences can begin to perform for the camera rather than simply live their experience. Psychologists call this the "observer effect," and it is relevant for a child who has learned that a meltdown, a funny face, or a private moment might end up online. The result, in some children, is heightened self-consciousness, or conversely, a normalised expectation that all experience is content.

4. Why Parents Share, and Why It's Hard to Stop

Understanding the motivation behind sharenting is not about judgment; it is about designing better habits. Parents post for reasons that are almost entirely legitimate on their face.

Connection, validation, and the loneliness of early parenting

Social media genuinely reduces isolation for parents, especially those who are new to a city, staying home with young children, or parenting without an extended family nearby. Posting milestones creates community, invites warm responses, and documents memories in a shareable form. None of that is trivial. Modern parenthood's performance pressures add another layer: the curated family feed has become a way of signalling that you are doing it right.

Monetisation and "kidfluencer" culture

A smaller but growing subset of parents have turned their children's online presence into a revenue stream. Family channels, sponsored posts, and affiliate partnerships with children as the primary subject raise serious ethical questions. Several European countries, including France, have begun legislating protections for minor content creators, recognising that a child cannot meaningfully consent to being the product.

Parents are often surprised to discover how limited legal protections are once content is voluntarily shared. GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in the EU and COPPA in the US both protect children's data from commercial collection by third parties, but neither law prevents a parent from posting.

The "right to be forgotten" is real but hard to use

Under GDPR, individuals have the right to request deletion of their personal data. But data shared publicly spreads quickly. A photo posted to Instagram can be screenshotted, re-shared, indexed by Google, archived by third-party services, and appear in AI training datasets, all before a deletion request is even filed. For a child who reaches adulthood wanting to scrub their online history, the reality is that "right to be forgotten" requests are slow, partial, and often unsuccessful.

The Child Protection and Privacy Guide provides a detailed breakdown of how parental sharing intersects with data protection law across different jurisdictions, useful reading for any parent building a family media policy.

6. A Practical Framework for Safer Sharing

The goal here is not to ban all photos of your child from the internet. It is to share with intention, proportionality, and your child's future interests in mind.

The PAUSE checklist before you post

Before sharing any content involving your 5–8 year old, run through these five questions:

P — Permission: Did you ask your child, and what did they say?
A — Audience: Who can actually see this, and do you know all of them personally?
U — Uniquely identifying: Does this reveal school, address, routine, or location?
S — Sensitive: Would this embarrass them as a teenager or adult?
E — Erasable: If they asked you to delete it in ten years, could you realistically do so?

Adjusting settings and habits

Private accounts are a baseline, not a complete solution. Regularly audit your followers or friends list. Turn off geotagging in your camera settings. Avoid photos that show school uniforms with visible logos. Create a family rule that applies to grandparents, aunts, and uncles too, as family members are responsible for a significant proportion of sharenting content.

For age-appropriate conversations with your child about what their body, image, and personal information belong to them, NO! I'M TELLING! Body Safety Activities offers structured activities that make the concept of personal boundaries concrete and accessible for 5–8 year olds.

If you are reviewing your family's broader digital habits, the article on why screen time limits fail explores how the physical and social infrastructure of a home either supports or undermines the media rules you set.

Sharing ScenarioRisk LevelKey ConcernSafer AlternativeRecommended Product
Public post with school uniform and nameVery HighLocation + identity exposedPrivate post, no uniform visibleHow to Be Invisible
Private account photo, no location dataLowAudience can still screenshotAudit followers regularlyCOPPA Regulation Guide
Family WhatsApp group milestone photoLow-MediumGroup may include unknown contactsKeep groups small; use disappearing messages5 Habits of the Tech-Ready Family
Child's funny moment posted to TikTokHighPublic reach, embarrassment, data harvestingAsk child first; restrict to close friends listNO! I'M TELLING! Body Safety Activities
Monetised family YouTube channelVery HighOngoing consent, financial exploitation, dataSeek legal advice; consult child regularlyOnline Privacy and Data Protection
Annual milestone photo, private accountLowDigital footprint accumulation over timeArchive locally; post selectivelyChild Protection and Privacy Guide

Sharenting is not a villain's behaviour. It is a loving impulse that exists in a world that was not designed with children's long-term interests at the centre. Every parent reading this has posted something they probably would not post again knowing what they now know, and that is fine. The point is not guilt; it is calibration.

Your child's digital story is still being written. The version they deserve is one they had at least some hand in shaping. One conversation, one family policy, one changed camera setting at a time, you can give them that.

If this raised questions for you, save this article, share it with a co-parent or grandparent, and start with just one change this week: ask your child before the next post.

Sources & References

  1. UK Children's Commissioner. "Who Knows What About Me? A Children's Commissioner's Report into the Collection and Use of Children's Data." 2018. https://www.childrenscommissioner.gov.uk
  2. US Federal Trade Commission. "Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule (COPPA)." 1998, amended 2013. https://www.ftc.gov/legal-library/browse/rules/childrens-online-privacy-protection-rule-coppa
  3. Barclays Bank UK. "Sharenting: Can Over-Sharing Lead to Identity Fraud?" 2018. https://home.barclays
  4. European Parliament. "General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), Article 17: Right to Erasure." 2018. https://gdpr-info.eu/art-17-gdpr
  5. Livingstone, Sonia, and Blum-Ross, Alicia. "Parenting for a Digital Future." Columbia University Press, 2020.
  6. Steinberg, Stacey B. "Sharenting: Children's Privacy in the Age of Social Media." Emory Law Journal, Vol. 66, 2017.
  7. UNICEF. "Children's Rights and Digital Technology." 2017. https://www.unicef.org

Frequently Asked Questions

What age should I ask my child before posting photos?
Start asking from around age three or four in very simple terms ("Is it okay if I share this picture with grandma?"). By age five or six, children can genuinely express preferences, and you should treat those preferences as binding. The practice of asking builds trust and models consent behaviours you want them to carry into their own digital lives.
Does making my account private fully protect my child?
No. Private accounts significantly reduce exposure but do not eliminate risk. Followers can screenshot and re-share content. Platform databases can be breached. Family members added to your private account may not have the same data security habits you do. Privacy settings are a floor, not a ceiling.
What should I do if a family member posts photos of my child without permission?
Address it directly and promptly. Most family members are acting from enthusiasm, not malice, and will comply when asked respectfully. Have a clear, simple family media policy in writing so expectations are known in advance. If someone repeatedly ignores your requests, you are entitled to ask them not to attend events where photography will happen, or to limit their access to your child's milestones.
Can my child's photos be used in AI training datasets?
Yes. Publicly posted images are routinely scraped and used to train AI systems, including facial recognition tools, without specific consent. This is one of the least discussed but most significant long-term risks of public sharenting, and it is extremely difficult to reverse.
Is sharenting ever okay?
Yes. Sharing thoughtfully with a limited, trusted audience, with your child's knowledge and agreement, and without revealing identifying or sensitive information, carries very low risk and genuine social benefits. The problem is habitual, public, unconsidered sharing, not every photo posted online.
What is a "digital footprint" and why does it matter for a 5-year-old?
A digital footprint is the permanent record of a person's presence online. For a five-year-old, it is almost entirely authored by adults. By the time that child is a teenager applying for school places, part-time jobs, or friendships, that record already exists and may be visible to people they have never met. Starting with a minimal footprint gives children more control over their own narrative as they grow.
Do platforms delete children's data if I ask?
Platforms are required under COPPA (US) and GDPR (EU) to honour deletion requests under certain conditions. In practice, this process is slow, incomplete, and may not reach data that was already shared with third parties or archived externally. Local backups and selective posting from the start are far more reliable than relying on deletion rights.

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