Can Parents Restrict Purchases When Buying Books On The Kindle App?

2025-09-03 21:17:18 308

3 Answers

Yara
Yara
2025-09-05 21:53:57
I get a little obsessive about settings, so here’s a more technical breakdown that’s worked for me when I don’t want rogue purchases popping up on my card.

First, control it at the Amazon level: create an Amazon Household and add a child profile. Use the Family Library to share only chosen titles. In 'Your Account' -> 'Login & Security' and 'Your Content and Devices', check 'Households and Family Library' and the parental settings. There’s also a 'Purchase Restrictions' area on Fire devices where you can require a PIN for buying. Crucially, disable 1-Click purchasing under '1-Click Settings' so accidental taps don’t immediately charge you. If the Kindle app forces purchases to the web (like on iOS), make sure that the associated Amazon account isn’t logged in on the device browser, or remove stored payment methods.

Second, use device tools: on iOS, Screen Time -> Content & Privacy -> iTunes & App Store Purchases to block or require password for purchases; on Android, Family Link gives you purchase approvals. If you want a soft permission, buy an Amazon gift card with a limited amount and let the child use that balance. Finally, consider Amazon Kids+ (if available in your region) which curates content and prevents purchases outside the subscription — I’ve used it during long trips and it’s saved both money and headaches.
Trent
Trent
2025-09-06 00:59:34
Okay, here's the short-and-honest version from my parent-brain: yes, you can absolutely put limits on Kindle purchases, but how you do it depends on the device and how your kid accesses books.

I’ve set this up a few different ways for nieces and cousins, and the two most reliable routes are Amazon’s family tools and your phone/tablet’s parental controls. On Amazon’s side there’s 'Amazon Household' and the Family Library — you can create a child profile, share specific books, and keep purchases separated. You can also enable parental controls on Fire tablets which let you set an easy-to-remember PIN that blocks buying or accessing mature content. For the account itself, go into your Amazon settings and turn off 1-Click purchasing or require a password for purchases; removing saved payment methods also helps.

Device-level tools help plug gaps: on iPhones and iPads use Screen Time to disable in-app purchases or require a password, and on Android you can use Google’s Family Link to approve or block purchases. One practical trick I use is to put gift card balance in a separate account if I want to let kids buy a small number of titles without giving blanket access to my card. It’s not foolproof, but combining Family Library, a purchase PIN, and device restrictions keeps surprises minimal.
Declan
Declan
2025-09-09 14:18:23
I like things simple and low-drama, so my go-to is a mix of two easy steps: set up a child profile in the Amazon Family Library and lock purchases with a PIN or remove the saved card. That way, the Kindle app can still show books but buying requires my intervention. I’ve found the Family Library handy because I can loan specific titles without giving blanket buy permissions, and when the kids want something new I can either approve it or suggest something similar from my curated list.

If the device is a phone or tablet, I also toggle the built-in purchase restrictions (Screen Time on iOS; Family Link on Android) so the app can’t cheat by redirecting to a browser. For cautious peace of mind, I sometimes put a small gift card balance on a separate account for controlled purchases — it’s a neat compromise between freedom and oversight. Honestly, it feels a lot better than wrestling refunds later, and it keeps bedtime story surprises pleasant rather than expensive.
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