Google Family Link is a parental control app for people with kids. The app launched a couple of years ago, but it became a part of stock Android starting with Android 10. You still need the app in order to use it, but you can access the options from the Settings menu directly. You get a surprising amount of control over child devices with this app and it has a lot of great options for managing your child’s phone usage. This tutorial shows you how to set it up and how to use the various features.
If all you need to do is set up parental controls on the Play Store, there is a vastly easier way to do it and we have a separate tutorial for Google Play parental controls here.
Getting Family Link set up is a bit tedious, but requires nothing overly complicated. Before we start, please make sure you have the following pre-requisites met. Otherwise, the tutorial won’t work.
Okay, now that everything is set up and ready, let’s get started. We’ll go through the step-by-step process. Since this requires input on two different devices, we’ll specify which device each step requires. If it says Parent Device, you do that step on your phone and likewise for the Child Device.
Okay, there are two potential things that can happen at this point. If you made your child’s account part of your Google Family before now, proceed to the next part of the tutorial. If you did not, Family Link will stop you and make you add the child account to your Google Family before allowing you to proceed. In my testing, this reset the entire process and made me start over once I added the account to my Google Family.
That’s it! You are now connected via Google Family Link. We found this process to be buggy and surprisingly frustrating. There are good odds that you’ll have to restart at least once. It took us a total of three tries to get to the end of the set-up without something going wrong. However, it’s doable with a little patience.
The child device is finished at this point. It and your child can be on their merry way. The device is connected and there is nothing left for the child to do. However, you can continue to configure Family Link on the parent device.
Now that you’ve gone through the admittedly arduous task of connecting Family Link, let’s get you using it to its fullest potential. From here on out, everything takes place on the parent device unless otherwise specified. There are a lot of things you can do so we’ll cover each one individually. Have fun!
There is a specific card in the Family Link app for locating the child phone. Simply tap the Turn On button and you will be shown a map where the phone is. You can easily find your child’s phone (and hopefully, your child) with this feature. This also works well as a Find My Phone service in case your child leaves their phone somewhere.
There is another card that we’ll discuss in detail below, but one of its functions is the ability to play a sound from the child phone in the event that they lose it. That also helps locate a lost phone.
There is a card with a Settings title. This lets you access basic parental controls. Tap the blue Manage text to access all of your options. From here, you can restrict the content your child sees on Google Play and manage filters on Google Chrome, YouTube, Google Search, and location.
Additionally, you can tap the Android apps section to set time limits on existing apps on the child’s phone or outright restrict access to apps. When an app is restricted access, the icon literally disappears from the home screen and app drawer, making it inaccessible.
Finally, this section holds a very important setting. You can require parental permission before the child logs into apps or games that the parent cannot supervise. This is enabled by default and cannot be turned off.
After accessing this card for the first time, it condenses into a much smaller size and the text changes to Manage settings in case you need to find it later. It should always be at the top.
The third card down on the list shows your child’s actual activity. You can see the apps they use and for how long with fancy bar graphs. There is a shortcut on this card to the app restrictions screen in case you decide that your kid is done playing that game they’ve been buried in all day.
There is a separate card that shows you what apps and games your child has installed on their device. That way you can keep track of what they download and what they’re doing. We’re not sure why the app and game download card is separate from the activity card, but that’s the way it is as of the time of this writing.
Kids probably shouldn’t be in their phone all day long. There is a whole section for screen time restrictions. The first tab, Daily Limit, lets you set screen time limits on a day-to-day basis. For example, you can set screen time to three hours on school days and six hours on weekends.
The second tab, Bedtime, lets you put a hard limit on how late your kids can use their phones. Once you set this up and the appropriate time hits, their phone locks itself down and they can’t access it until the morning. This is an excellent tool for getting kids to bed.
The final card does two things. It plays the sound we mentioned earlier in the location section above and it also lets you edit child device settings. You can set restrictions on things like adding users, accessing developer options, and the ability to sideload apps from unknown sources. These are all disabled by default and you can enable them if you want to.
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