
Discord is delaying its planned global rollout of age assurance features following community backlash, acknowledging that it failed to clearly communicate how the system would work and what data it would collect.
The company now says it will expand verification options, increase vendor transparency, and publish technical documentation before proceeding with a broader launch in the second half of 2026.
The reversal was announced by Discord co-founder and CTO Stanislav Vishnevskiy, who admitted that while the company anticipated controversy around its identity and verification system, it underestimated the degree of confusion surrounding the rollout, which even led to a measurable user exodus. Many users believed Discord would require facial scans or uploads of government-issued IDs from all users, a perception he described as a communication failure on the company’s part.
The original plan involved expanding Discord’s “teen-by-default” protections globally and implementing a layered age assurance system. That system combined internal age inference mechanisms with third-party verification options, including facial age estimation and ID-based checks, particularly in jurisdictions with strict online safety laws such as the UK and Australia.
Founded in 2015, Discord has grown into one of the world’s largest community platforms, serving more than 150 million monthly active users across gaming, education, hobbyist, and professional communities. Its user base skews young, placing the company under increasing regulatory pressure to implement child safety measures in line with laws emerging in the UK, Australia, Brazil, parts of the EU, and several US states.
According to Vishnevskiy, Discord’s goal is to leave the experience unchanged for more than 90% of users. The company claims that most adults will never be prompted for age verification because its internal systems can infer age from account-level signals. These include how long an account has existed, whether a payment method is on file, server participation patterns, and other behavioral metadata. Discord states that these systems do not analyze message content or read private conversations.
For users who attempt to access age-restricted content and cannot be automatically categorized as adults, verification may be required. However, those who decline verification will retain their accounts, servers, direct messages, and voice access. The only restriction will be the inability to access age-gated areas or modify certain safety settings.
In October 2025, Discord disclosed a breach involving a customer support provider that exposed roughly 70,000 government ID images submitted during age-appeal processes, along with associated account metadata. Although Discord stated that passwords and private messages were not compromised, attackers claimed broader access to internal systems.
Vishnevskiy emphasized that the breached vendor is no longer used and is not involved in age assurance. He also revealed that Discord conducted a limited UK pilot with identity verification provider Persona in January 2026 but ultimately decided not to proceed. The company has now introduced a new requirement that any facial age estimation must be performed entirely on-device, ensuring biometric data never leaves a user’s phone. Persona, according to Discord, did not meet that threshold.
For its global expansion, Discord says it will publicly list all verification vendors on its website, detail their data-handling practices, and clearly display verification methods within the product. It is also developing additional verification options, including credit card-based age checks, to reduce reliance on biometric or ID-based systems.
In regions where laws mandate approved age verification methods, including the UK, Australia, and soon Brazil, adults seeking access to restricted content must verify through vendors such as k-ID, as internal inference systems are not yet legally sufficient. For the rest of the world, the company intends to rely primarily on its automated age determination tools, with manual verification affecting fewer than 10% of users.
Discord is also introducing a “spoiler channel” feature to reduce unnecessary age-gating for communities that use restricted channels for non-adult discussions, such as political topics or media spoilers.
Before launching globally, Discord has committed to publishing a technical blog post detailing the methodology behind its age inference systems and including age assurance metrics in future transparency reports, such as how often automated systems sufficed versus when manual verification was required.







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