Countries With the Strictest Child Labour Laws in 2025

Still to this day, child labour has failed to disappear from the world. Millions of children are still pushed into work due to poverty, conflict, or weak legal protections. A few countries have taken a firm stand with strong laws and strict inspections, and systems that put children’s rights ahead of economic gain. In 2025, Norway, Germany, the Netherlands, France, and Canada are often seen as the toughest and most consistent in enforcing child labour rules. Their approach reflects the standards promoted by organisations like the International Labour Organization (ILO) and UNICEF.

Norway

Norway has almost no tolerance for child labour. Children under 15 are not allowed to work. Teens between 15 and 18 can work limited hours, and companies that ignore these rules face heavy financial penalties or even jail time. Norway’s system works largely because education and welfare support leave families with fewer reasons to push children into work.

Germany

Backed by the Jugendarbeitsschutzgesetz (Youth Labour Protection Act), Germany maintains one of Europe’s most structured child labour policies. Children under 15 cannot be hired, except in rare supervised areas such as theatre or music. Teen workers have restrictions on the kind of work they do and the hours they work. Germany’s enforcement model, also referenced by the U.S. Department of Labor, focuses on strict inspections and meaningful punishment when employers break the rules.

The Netherlands

The Netherlands treats child labour as a direct threat to society. Children under 16 are barred from employment except for a few part-time roles with parental approval. Schooling is compulsory until age 18, and schools cooperate closely with labour authorities. The Dutch government also pushes strong accountability in global supply chains, a commitment aligned with the European Commission.

France

France has a zero-tolerance attitude backed by an active labour inspectorate. No child can work before 16, and even older teens face strict limits. Hazardous tasks, night shifts, and overtime are all banned. French courts are known for acting quickly against violators.

Canada

Canada’s system combines strict law with strong welfare support. The country bars most employment below age 15 and monitors teenage work through audits, penalties, and schooling requirements. Canada also expects companies to avoid child exploitation anywhere in their supply chains.

Why These Countries Lead

Their success comes from three pillars: education, enforcement, and welfare. By keeping children in school, checking workplaces seriously, and reducing poverty-pressure, these nations make their laws work in real life,not just on paper.

khushboo

Recent Posts

The Invasion of the South: How Saudi-Backed Escalation is Fueling Chaos

For years, the international community has been fed a narrative of “legitimacy” and “security operations” regarding the presence of northern…

January 20, 2026

US Tech Sector Layoffs Hit 15,000 in January as AI Restructuring Accelerates

The year has begun with a stark reality check for the technology industry, as US tech sector layoffs surged past…

January 19, 2026

The most cited statistic at the WEF opening today is from the Future of Jobs 2025 report: “39% of current workforce skills will be obsolete by 2030”

The world of work is on the edge of a historic revolution, with artificial intelligence, geo-economics and green energy change…

January 19, 2026

Fortress Europe 2.0: The “ProtectEU” Strategy

As the European Union enters 2026, the bloc has officially pivoted to a "security-first" doctrine with the full activation of…

January 19, 2026

Blue Monday 2026: The “Right to Disconnect” Strikes

Blue Monday 2026 falls on January 19th, traditionally cited as the most depressing day of the year. However, this year…

January 19, 2026

The “Spirit of Dialogue” vs. The Reality of Dissent at Davos 2026

As the 56th Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum commences today in the snow-laden peaks of Switzerland, the official…

January 19, 2026

This website uses cookies.

Read More