Online safety article for parents
App & game safety

Is Fortnite Safe for Kids?

The cartoon violence isn't the issue. The two real things to handle in Fortnite are voice chat with strangers and how easily real money disappears into it.

The short answer: Fortnite can be okay for the right age with the settings sorted — the two things to handle are voice chat with strangers and spending. Lock those down and put the console in a shared room, and it's a manageable game rather than a worry.

Fortnite isn't the gore-fest some parents picture — it's cartoonish. The real issues are who your child talks to and how easily real money disappears into it.

What Fortnite is

A hugely popular online game where players team up or compete in real time — which means voice and text chat with people you don't know, and a shop full of tempting (real-money) extras called V-Bucks.

The real risks

  • Voice chat with strangers. The most overlooked one — open voice chat connects your child with anyone in the lobby.
  • Spending. V-Bucks are real money, and it's easy to rack up purchases.
  • Time. It's designed to keep you playing "one more match".

The exact settings to change

  1. Set your child's real age / use a Cabined Account. Younger players get Cabined Accounts, which disable voice and free text chat until a parent gives consent — a strong default. Don't fudge the age older.
  2. Set up Epic parental controls via the Epic Account Portal: set a Parental Controls PIN, then lock the settings.
  3. Restrict communication: set voice and text chat to Friends only (or off for younger kids), and set friend requests to require approval.
  4. Require the PIN for purchases, and don't save a card to the account. Consider a fixed V-Bucks gift-card allowance instead.
  5. Set playtime/reporting so you can see how long they've played.
  6. Console or device stays in a shared family area — voice chat included.

So what age?

Common Sense Media pegs Fortnite at around 13+, mainly for the open chat and spending pressure. Younger than that, only on a Cabined Account with chat off and tight supervision.

What we do

Friends-only voice chat, PIN on purchases, no saved card, and it's played in the lounge. The chat setting is the one I'd never skip.

The bottom line: Fortnite is manageable for older kids once you set voice chat to friends-only, PIN the purchases and keep it in a shared space. The cartoon violence isn't the issue — strangers and spending are.

Want the full lockdown steps?

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Sources: Epic Games — Parental Controls & Cabined Accounts; Common Sense Media; eSafety Commissioner. Settings current as of June 2026.