One minute you’re teaching them to walk, the next they have a phone and a social life that’s busier than yours. The digital world is here to stay. The real question is how you’re going to handle it.
That’s where an app to track your child’s phone can help. This isn’t about spying. It’s about safety.
It’s More Than Just a Map
Today’s parental control apps do a lot more than just show you a dot on a map. The basics that most parents want are location tracking, screen time limits, and web filtering.
But they can do a lot more.
- App Management: See what apps they’re downloading, block the ones you don’t like, and set time limits on TikTok or YouTube.
- Web Filtering: Block entire categories of websites, like gambling or adult content, so you don’t have to blacklist every URL by hand.
- Communication Monitoring: Some apps monitor texts, calls, and social media activity. They can flag things like cyberbullying or talk about self-harm.
- Geofencing: Get an alert when your child gets to or leaves a specific place, like school or a friend's house.
- Driving Reports: For new drivers, some services can tell you how they're driving.
It was 4:17 PM on a Tuesday when my friend realized her son wasn’t at soccer practice. He was across town. He’d left his old Honda Civic at the field and hopped in a car with an older friend she’d never met. A quick look at the app let her see where he was, call him, and figure things out without panicking. It wasn't about getting him in trouble. It was about knowing he was safe.
Are the Free Options Good Enough?
Before you spend any money, check the tools already on your phone.
For iPhones, start with Apple Screen Time. It’s built into iOS and lets you set downtime, limit app use, and restrict content.
For Android, Google Family Link is the way to go. It’s free and has solid location tracking, app approvals, and screen time limits. It's probably the best free option out there for Android users.