Internet & Online Safety · Vanuatu
Online safety & content laws in Vanuatu (2026)
Vanuatu shaded by its internet & online safety status
In late 2024 Vanuatu enacted a dedicated, NZ-modelled online-safety framework: the Harmful Digital Communications Act No. 14 of 2024 sets communication principles and criminalises online harm, while the Digital Safety Authority Act No. 15 of 2024 (commenced 2 January 2025) creates a Digital Safety Authority, a Digital Safety Commission, and a Commissioner to oversee digital content and communications. A 2025 amendment broadened offences and added platform/ISP blocking powers, and an October 2025 amendment imposed school-based internet controls for students under 16. The 2021 Cybercrime Act and 2024 Data Protection Act complete the regime.
Key points
The Harmful Digital Communications Act No. 14 of 2024 establishes communication principles for online conduct, creates offences for causing harm by posting digital communications and for non-consensual intimate visual recordings, and allows complaints to a Commissioner and the Magistrates' Court — closely modelled on New Zealand's HDCA.
The Digital Safety Authority Act No. 15 of 2024 (assented 5 Dec 2024, commenced 2 Jan 2025) creates the Digital Safety Authority and a Digital Safety Commission to set and approve standards for digital safety, communications and content, and provides for a Commissioner of Harmful Digital Communications.
The Harmful Digital Communications (Amendment) Act 2025 broadened offences (online impersonation, ID fraud, expanded pornography offences) and empowered the Magistrates' Court to order ISPs to block adult websites and impose requirements on social-media platforms.
In October 2025 Parliament passed (45 votes) an amendment introduced by PM Jotham Napat requiring schools to set internet policies and restrict access to pornographic and inappropriate material for students, strengthening online controls for under-16s on school grounds.
The Cybercrime Act No. 22 of 2021 (in force 22 Sep 2021), developed with Council of Europe GLACY+ support and aligned with the Budapest Convention, criminalises illegal access, interception, data/system interference, and online conduct such as cyber harassment, stalking and libel.
Civil-society monitors and Amnesty International flag that the Cybercrime Act has been used to prosecute online critics — e.g., 2022 arrests over Facebook posts about politicians — raising concerns the online-harm regime can chill legitimate expression.
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Last verified 5/24/2026 · Orientation, not legal advice - verify against the primary sources linked above. Explore the full world map →