For grandparents and family carers raising a relative's child — practical online safety when the placement and the family ties are intertwined.
Kinship carers — grandparents, aunts, uncles, siblings, family friends — raise children whose lives are already enmeshed with the wider family. That brings unique online-safety challenges: managing contact with birth parents, navigating family group chats, and often doing all of this with less formal support than foster carers receive.
This guide is for any kinship carer with a child in their care, whether under a special guardianship order, child arrangements order, or informal arrangement.
Starting from strengths
Kinship carers know the child, the family, and the history in a way that no professional ever will. That insight is enormously protective. Kinship-cared children often value continuity of family identity, and online life can be one of the places that continuity lives.
Birth-parent contact via social media outside the agreed plan
Have a written agreement about contact where possible. Be honest with the child about what is allowed and why. Avoid surprise blocks; explain in advance.
Carer's own confidence with apps, platforms, and settings
You do not need to be a tech expert. Ask the child to show you their world; visit our app guides together. Kinship (0300 123 7015) offers carer support.
Wider family pressure to 'just let them be in the chat'
Decisions about online contact rest with the carer with parental responsibility. You are entitled to set rules even if extended family disagree.
Children using online spaces to seek information about their birth story
Expect this — especially in adolescence. Be the calm, non-shocked adult who helps them make sense of what they find, rather than the one they have to hide it from.
Make sure the school knows the child is in kinship care and who has parental responsibility. Update the contact list. The designated safeguarding lead and SENCO (if relevant) should be informed of any online-safety concerns. Kinship (0300 123 7015) supports carers in advocating for their children.
Signs to take seriously
If you suspect grooming, sextortion, or unsafe contact, report to CEOP at ceop.police.uk and call 101 (999 if there is immediate danger). NSPCC (0808 800 5000) is available for any safeguarding concern. Kinship (0300 123 7015) can support you specifically as a kinship carer.
Last reviewed: 2026-05-16