Snapchat teen Spotlight sharing is getting a tighter privacy lane for younger users. Snap is moving younger teens away from broadly public Spotlight visibility and toward a profile experience built around friends.
The change fits the broader teen-safety framework Snap lays out on its Safeguards for Teens page. Snap says younger teens, ages 13 to 15, do not have access to Public Profiles. Older teens, ages 16 to 17, can access Public Profiles, but the feature is off by default and comes with extra protections.
What Changes for Younger Teens
The new My Profile approach keeps Stories and Spotlight posts in one place, but the important part is visibility. The Snap-provided screen says younger users can share Spotlight posts just with friends, rather than making those videos publicly viewable across Snapchat.
That matters because Spotlight is Snapchat’s short-form video surface. It can push posts beyond a user’s friend group when content is eligible for wider distribution. Snap’s updated teen setup pulls younger teen creators closer to the private-by-default behavior Snapchat has long used for messaging.
Snap also says teen accounts have limits around being contacted by strangers. Snapchatters can only communicate with mutually accepted friends or people whose numbers they already saved in their contacts. Tagging in Snaps, Stories, or Spotlight videos is also limited to friends, or to followers for users who have Public Profiles.
Why Parents May Notice
The timing lines up with growing pressure on social platforms to treat teen visibility as a safety issue, not just a sharing preference. We saw the same direction in recent coverage of how Ofcom pushed Meta, Snap, and Roblox on child safety.
Snap’s page also says teen Snapchatters will not see how many people favorited their Stories or Spotlights. The company frames that as a way to keep the focus on creativity rather than public approval metrics.
This is still a platform safety move, not a full wall around teen content. Older teens can still choose broader sharing through Public Profiles. For younger teens, though, the message is clearer: Spotlight can be creative without automatically becoming public.
