Here’s the latest on England’s school mobile phones legislation.
- A Conservative amendment to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill in the House of Lords is moving to make school mobile phone bans statutory, formalising existing guidance into law. This would give legal force to policies many schools already enforce and expand enforcement via Ofsted inspections.[1][5]
- The policy context: the government has long signalled that mobile phones should be banned or tightly restricted in schools to reduce disruption and safeguard pupils, with previous guidance encouraging bans during the school day (and including break times) to be adopted across England.[2][9]
- Status as of April 2026: peers in the Lords were set to vote on the amendment, with ongoing parliamentary process (ping-pong between Lords and Commons) to finalise the wording, and Ofsted already incorporating mobile phone policies into inspections from this year.[3][1]
- Related coverage notes: reports emphasize that many headteachers already restrict phones, and the government aims to provide clear, statutory backing for those practices while keeping flexibility at the school level; the broader Safe-Child welfare framework remains a key backdrop for this effort.[1][3]
Illustration: If the amendment passes, schools would rely on statute to ban or tightly control phone use throughout the day, reducing disputes about policySharpness and making enforcement part of standard regulatory compliance, with Ofsted checks reinforcing adherence.[3][1]
If you’d like, I can pull the exact parliamentary status and any recent voting outcomes or provide a quick summary of the proposed statutory language and how it would affect schools in New Jersey vs England.[1][3]
Sources
Mobile phones will be prohibited in schools across England under new government guidance issued on Monday, which supports headteachers in monitoring their use throughout the school day including at break times. While many schools around the UK are already prohibiting mobile phone use with great results, the British government said the new guidance will ensure there is a consistent approach across all schools.
education.economictimes.indiatimes.comSchools will receive new guidance on prohibiting mobile phone use during the school day.
www.gov.ukSky News understands Josh MacAlister has removed the proposal from his bill in the hope ministers will support its other reforms - including raising the age of "internet adulthood" from 13 to 16.
news.sky.comPeers will vote in the Lords on Monday evening on a Conservative amendment to the bill on mobile phones
www.independent.co.ukThe move comes just weeks after peers supported legislation to ban under-16s in the UK from social media.
www.bbc.co.ukMobile phone use to be banned during the school day, including at break times, new guidance recommends.
www.gov.ukEngland introduces new government guidance mandating phone-free school days to boost focus, discipline, and student wellbeing across schools nationwide.
ciobulletin.comSchools will receive new guidance on prohibiting mobile phone use during the school day.
www.wired-gov.netPeers will vote in the Lords on Monday evening on a Conservative amendment to the bill on mobile phones
www.independent.co.uk