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More children report seeing pornography online than two years ago, with more stumbling across it by accident and some aged as young as six – new research by the Children’s Commissioner finds.  

New data from children aged 16 to 21 proves that despite major efforts to hold tech firms accountable for the content served up to children on their sites, more are seeing pornography online than in 2023, when the Commissioner published her first landmark research on the subject, ’A lot of it is just abuse’.   

More than a quarter of children reported having seen it by age 11, with some reporting they have seen it ‘aged six or younger’. Many say it is now normal to see violent content that depicts acts that are illegal or soon will be. 

More than half – 58% – had seen content featuring strangulation before turning 18, and many agreed it has affected their behaviour towards one another, with some particularly concerned about its impact on attitudes towards women and girls: 44% of the children surveyed agreed with the statement ‘girls may say no at first but then can be persuaded to have sex’. Girls were more likely to agree with the statement than boys.  

Children’s Commissioner Dame Rachel de Souza said:  

“My first report into children’s exposure to pornography two years ago offered damning proof of the scale of the problem we needed to solve. Today’s research, updated and replicated exactly from my 2023 work, highlights how little has changed in two years: violent pornography is easily accessible to children, exposure is often accidental and often via the most common social media sites, and it is impacting children’s behaviours and beliefs in deeply concerning ways – particular when it comes to attitudes towards women and girls. 

“This report must be a line in the sand. It must be a snapshot of what was – not what will be. New protections introduced in July by Ofcom, part of the Online Safety Act, provide a real opportunity to make children’s safety online a non-negotiable priority for everyone: policymakers, big tech giants and smaller tech developers. 

“Technology is evolving at incredible speed, but so are the risks it poses for the children using it. Our response – and our regulation – must match its pace.  

The findings, published today, are from a nationally representative survey of children and young people aged 16-21, carried out in May 2025 – shortly before the introduction of Ofcom’s Children’s Codes in July. Using the same methodology and questions as the 2023 survey to ensure consistency, it found:  

When questioned about the circumstances or impact of exposure to pornography, more than four in five children and young people said seeing pornography online affected their expectations around sex (82%), while nearly three-quarters (73%) said it affected their behaviour towards one another. Both boys and girls held attitudes about what was expected of women during sex, and those who had seen pornography were more likely to hold beliefs about women that were degrading.  

The implementation of the Online Safety Act provides the way forward to end children’s exposure to this kind of content, as will the introduction of the protections within the Children’s Code in July 2025. Beyond these, the Commissioner has set out a number of recommendations in her report to tackle the evolving harms to children:  

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