How To Set Up Internet Explorer Parental Controls
Learn how to set parental controls on your child’s Internet Explorer browser.

If you want your child to use Microsoft Edge or Internet Explorer to access the internet while they are using your computer, you’ll set the parental controls in Microsoft Family. This is the same place you go to set controls for your Windows 10 PC and Xbox 360/One gaming consoles, as they are all Microsoft products.
Setting Parental Controls
How to add child accounts to your family
If you haven’t already done so, you’ll need to add your child to your Microsoft Family. Doing so allows you to indicate that you are the parent, and that the account needs supervision. Both you and your child will need a Microsoft account, so if you do not have one, start there.
- Open the Windows Settings menu and choose Accounts.
- Choose Family & Other People from the left sidebar menu.
- Under Your Family, click Add a Family Member.
- Enter the email address associated with your child’s Microsoft account.
- Open your child’s email account, find the email from Microsoft, and click the link to confirm that they are your child and need to be added to your Microsoft Family.
- Once the account has been added to your Family, you’ll be able to access parental control settings for Microsoft Edge, Internet Explorer, and your PC in general.
Bark helps families manage and protect their children’s digital lives.

How to access parental control settings
- Choose Accounts from your Windows Settings menu.
- Look at the Family & Other People menu again. Now you should see your child’s account and the option to Manage Family Settings Online.
- Click Manage Family Settings Online. This opens the Microsoft Family Parental Control page in your browser.
- Menu options on the right allow you to monitor each child’s activity and set your parental controls. Because we’re only focusing on Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge, this will demonstrate the Web Browsing section only.
- Windows automatically blocks search results and filters websites that contain potentially inappropriate content. Any website that hasn’t yet been added to Microsoft’s blacklist will still be accessible, and so will user-generated content on “safe” sites.
- These controls only work on Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge.
- Microsoft parental controls block access to other browsers by default.
- If you want, you can disable the block on other browsers and use additional parental control methods to protect those browsers.
Helpful Resources for Families
Here are some awesome tools to help families navigate raising kids in the digital age!
All-in-One Parental Control Guide
Your go-to list of parental controls for devices, apps, games, and more.
Bark's Parenting Facebook Group
Bark’s Parenting in a Tech World Facebook group has over 190k members.

Bark — The Parental Control Solution
In addition to setting parental controls on your child’s device, the next safety layer parents and caregivers should strongly consider is a monitoring solution to assess the content their kids encounter (and produce) across text messages, social media, email, and more.
Bark helps families manage and protect their children’s entire online worlds. Our award-winning service monitors 30+ of the most popular apps and social media platforms for signs of issues like cyberbullying, suicidal ideation, online predators, threats of violence, and more. Our web filtering and screen time management tools empower families to set healthy limits around the sites and apps their kids can access and when they can visit them. Sign up today to start your free, one-week trial.