GuidesPhones and devices
Your Kid’s First Phone: Set It Up Before It Leaves the Box
The first phone is a strange gift. You hand your kid a rectangle that contains their friends, every game ever made, a camera, and the entire adult internet, and then you say be sensible. Most of what goes wrong in the first year can be prevented in the first hour, while the phone is still on the kitchen table and you still hold all the passwords. Here is that hour, step by step.

Is it even time yet?
Age is the least useful signal, though if you want the number, many kids get a first phone somewhere between 10 and 12, usually because school logistics start demanding it. The better signals are boring ones. Does your kid keep track of their own belongings? Do they tell you when something goes wrong, even when it was their fault? Can they stop doing a fun thing when asked, at least most days? A kid who loses their jacket weekly and hides broken things will do the same with a phone, just with higher stakes.
If the honest answer is not yet, a dumb phone or a smartwatch that calls a few saved numbers covers the school problem without opening the whole internet. Nobody has ever regretted starting small.
The first hour: set it up before it leaves the kitchen
Do this together, with your kid watching and asking questions. Secret settings breed secret workarounds. Settings you explain become the normal way phones work.
- Create the account inside your family group, with their real birth year. Lying about the age here turns off every child protection the platform has.
- Route app installs through approval by a parent or guardian. The phone can ask, you tap yes or no from your own phone. This one setting prevents more trouble than all the others combined.
- Turn on the platform’s family tools for downtime and app budgets. Even loose limits beat none, and you can relax them as trust grows.
- Share locations inside the family, both directions. If you can see them, they can see you. Kids accept surveillance far better when it is mutual.
- Seed the contacts together. Family, three or four friends, the school office. A short list makes an unknown number feel unusual, which is exactly the instinct you want.
- Trim notifications to messages from humans. Every app will beg for attention by default, and a phone that buzzes forty times a day trains a kid to obey it.
- Set the passcode together, and store their silly sentence passwords in the family password manager. Our password guide covers that whole system.
That last point leans on the method from our password guide for kids, and the daily rhythm questions are covered in the screen time rules guide. The three of them together are basically the first phone starter kit.
The phone deal: four sentences, not a contract
Printable twenty point phone contracts photograph well and change nothing. What works is a deal short enough that everyone actually remembers it. Ours has four lines.
- The phone sleeps in the kitchen, every night, no exceptions for weekends.
- We look at the phone together sometimes. Never secretly, never as a raid, always with you in the room.
- New apps get asked about first, and group chats with strangers are a no until we say otherwise.
- When something weird, mean, or scary shows up, you show us, and you will never be in trouble for showing us.
The first mistake decides the next five years
Sometime in the first months, something will go wrong. A game charge you did not approve, a mean message, a stranger in a game chat, a website that should not have loaded. This moment is not the failure. It is the exam, and it is yours, not theirs. Fix the thing calmly, say thank you for telling me like you mean it, and skip the speech. Your kid just learned that reporting problems is safe. That lesson is worth more than every setting on this page.
Practice the phone before the phone
A first phone goes smoother when the instincts are already there. Max’s quest has a whole module about taming a chaotic phone, from app permissions to pop-ups that scream tap me, and kids who have played it recognize the tricks when their own phone tries them.
Smartwatch or phone first?
If the need is reaching you after school, a watch with calls to saved contacts does the job for a year or two and postpones the whole internet question. If the need is group chats and games, a watch will not scratch the itch for long, and you may as well have the phone conversation properly.
What about the class group chat?
Class chats are usually where the first drama lands. Let your kid join, keep notifications for it quiet, and make screenshots the house reflex for anything mean. Most group chat trouble is survivable when a calm adult sees it early.
When does social media start?
The platforms themselves say 13, and that is a floor, not a finish line. Readiness looks like handling the class chat without weekly drama, and telling you about problems on their own. Start on one platform, together, with the account private, and treat it as a new conversation rather than part of the phone deal.