Qustodio is one of the most complete parental control apps available, and after testing it across Windows, Android, iOS, and Mac, that reputation holds up. Web filtering, screen time management, per-app time limits, location tracking, social media monitoring, and YouTube oversight all sit inside a single dashboard that works across more platforms than most competitors.
The honest caveat is that the experience depends heavily on your devices. Android users get the full feature set. iOS households will find several monitoring capabilities unavailable or limited, particularly around social media. That is worth knowing before you choose a plan.
Pros and Cons
- Customizable filtering for 29+ categories
- Live tracking, geofencing, and location history
- Granular per-app daily time limits
- Monitors WhatsApp, TikTok, and Instagram
- Android Panic Button for emergency alerts
- Supports Windows, Mac, iOS, and Kindle Fire
- 30-day trial with no credit card required
- Social monitoring is limited to Android
- No independent third-party privacy audits
Rating Breakdown
To evaluate Qustodio, I applied a consistent scoring methodology across the same parameters used in my other parental control reviews. Each parameter is scored out of 10.
| Parameter | Score | Why this score |
| Pricing | 8.5/10 | The free plan is a permanent tier rather than a time-limited teaser, which is a genuine advantage. However, the Premium trial is only 3 days, which is one of the shortest in the category, and limits how thoroughly you can evaluate the product before committing. |
| Features | 9.0/10 | One of the most comprehensive feature sets in the category. Web filtering, screen time, app controls, location monitoring, social media monitoring, YouTube tracking, gaming alerts, and the Panic Button are all present. The iOS limitation on social media message alerts is the main gap. |
| Content Filtering | 8.5/10 | Category-based web filtering tested consistently across multiple browsers during testing. The filter covers a broad range of content types and lets parents set per-category rules rather than applying a single blanket restriction. |
| Device Performance | 9.4/10 | Runs as a background service on mobile and as desktop software on Windows and Mac. No meaningful slowdown was observed during normal browsing or app use during testing. |
| Ease of Use | 9.5/10 | Account creation is simple, and the child profile setup takes under two minutes. The Rules section gives parents a clear overview of every control area. The volume of features can feel overwhelming at first, but the card-based interface manages the complexity well. |
| Support | 6.5/10 | No live chat, no phone support. The only contact route is a ticket form, with a 1- to 2-business-day response time. For a parental control app where setup issues need quick resolution, that wait is a real limitation. Free plan users cannot submit tickets at all. |
| Overall | 8.6/10 | Qustodio is the most complete standalone parental control app available for mixed-device families. The Android experience is excellent. iOS households should verify which features matter most to them before committing to the Complete plan. |
1. Plans and Pricing
Qustodio has a free tier and two paid plans. The free version protects one device with basic features and is a permanent option rather than a time-limited trial, though most families will outgrow it quickly once more than one device needs covering.
The Basic plan covers up to five devices at $59.95 per year, equivalent to $5.00 per month. It includes web filtering, app and games blocking, daily time limits, location monitoring, and internet pause.
The Complete plan covers unlimited devices at $109.95 per year, equivalent to $9.16 per month, and adds YouTube monitoring, social media message monitoring, AI-powered alerts, gaming alerts, calls and messages monitoring, custom routines, and priority Care Plus support.
Free trial: Qustodio offers a 3-day trial of Premium features with no credit card required. Three days is a short window, so it is worth going in with a clear list of the specific features you want to test rather than exploring casually.
Money-back guarantee: Both paid plans come with a 30-day money-back guarantee. This gives you meaningful time to evaluate the product properly after purchasing, which compensates for the brevity of the free trial.
Payment methods: Qustodio accepts Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, Google Pay, and Apple Pay, with available options varying by location.
Worth knowing: The value of upgrading from Basic to Complete depends heavily on which features your household actually needs.
Calls and messages monitoring, social media message alerts, YouTube monitoring, and unlimited device coverage are all Complete-only. If your child is on iOS, note that social media message alerts for Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, and X are Android-only regardless of which plan you choose.
2. Features
| Feature | Notes |
| Safe search | Enforces safe search settings across major search engines on all connected devices. Available on both plans. |
| Web filtering | Block, allow, or alert per content category. Blocking by app category also available on both plans, letting you restrict entire content types rather than toggling individual apps. |
| Games and app blocking | Block or limit access to specific apps and games. Includes app download alerts so you are notified when a new app is installed. Available on both plans. |
| App insights | Shows detailed information about the apps your child uses and surfaces age-appropriate alternatives. Available on both plans. |
| Daily time limits | Set daily screen time allowances per child. Available on both plans. |
| Pause internet | Instantly disconnects the child’s device from the internet, overriding any existing time limit rules. Available on both plans. |
| Device blocking routines | Schedule automatic rules for specific times, such as bedtime or school hours. Available on both plans. |
| Custom app and website routines | Set granular custom rules for specific apps and websites at specific times. Complete plan only. |
| Games and app time limits | Set individual time limits per app or game, separate from the overall daily screen time limit. Complete plan only. |
| 30-day activity reports | Daily and weekly summaries of browsing, app use, and screen time across all connected devices. Available on both plans. |
| Panic button | Lets your child send an immediate alert with their location to trusted contacts. Android only. Available on both plans. |
| App download alerts | Notifies you when your child installs a new app on their device. Available on both plans. |
| YouTube monitoring | See what your child searches and watches on YouTube. Complete plan only. |
| AI-powered search alerts | Flags potentially harmful search terms and sends an immediate parent alert. Complete plan only. |
| AI-powered message alerts | Scans messages for concerning content and alerts parents. Complete plan only. |
| Social monitoring | Message alerts across WhatsApp, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, X, and Line. Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, and X alerts are Android only. Complete plan only. |
| Gaming alerts | Monitors voice chat and in-game communication for risky content. Complete plan only. |
| Calls and messages monitoring | View call logs and SMS content. iOS monitoring requires a Mac or Windows computer connected to the account. Complete plan only. |
| Location monitoring | Real-time GPS tracking with location history. Available on both plans. |
| Saved places alerts | Geofencing notifications when your child arrives at or leaves a saved location, such as home or school. Complete plan only. |
| Care Plus support | Personalized support from a dedicated Qustodio expert. Available on request with the Complete plan. |
3. In-House Testing Results
Qustodio has not been independently audited for privacy or data handling practices, and no parental control equivalent of a security lab test exists for this category.
Effectiveness comes down to how the product performs under real-world conditions.
I tested across Android and Windows, working through the core features systematically.
Web filtering held up well. I searched for potentially harmful content, including drug-related terms, and the searches triggered alerts on the parent dashboard within minutes. The filter also handled category-level blocking cleanly. Qustodio supports browser extensions across Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari, and Amazon Silk, and enforces safe search settings on Google, Bing, and YouTube across all of them.

App controls were among the strongest features. The dashboard shows every app the child uses across all connected devices, and you can set individual rules for each one: block, allow, or set a time limit. You can also block entire categories, such as social, education, and gaming in one step rather than toggling apps one by one.

Gaming monitoring is a feature worth highlighting specifically. Qustodio can monitor voice chat during gameplay on Fortnite, Roblox, Valorant, and Steam games, flagging risky moments in real time. This is not something most parental control apps cover.
Location tracking displayed new locations accurately in the Timeline. I set up Home and School as saved locations, but the geofencing alerts did not trigger when the device left those locations during testing. Real-time tracking worked, but the geofencing alert reliability is worth noting.

There were two limitations that stood out as genuine gaps:
- Text message monitoring does not flag inappropriate content the way web search monitoring does. I tested similar language across both, and only the web search triggered an alert. Text content appears to be logged but not analyzed in the same way.
- Qustodio did not indicate when a picture was received via text. For parents who consider image sharing a significant concern, that is a meaningful blind spot.
Verdict on testing
Qustodio performs reliably on its core functions: web filtering, app controls, screen time management, and location tracking. The gaming voice chat monitoring is a genuine differentiator.
The gaps in text message analysis and the geofencing alert inconsistency are real limitations that parents should factor in, particularly if messaging behavior is the primary concern they are trying to address.
4. Impact on Device Performance
Because Qustodio operates as a background service on mobile and as a desktop application on Windows and Mac, its resource footprint is different from a browser extension-based security tool.
On Android and iOS, Qustodio runs as a system-level service that intercepts app activity and browser traffic. On Windows and Mac, it installs a desktop application.
During testing on Android, I did not observe meaningful battery drain or app slowdown. The service runs quietly in the background without appearing prominently in the active process list visible to the child. On Windows, the desktop application was visible in Task Manager with a modest memory footprint consistent with a lightweight background process.
One practical note worth knowing: on iOS, Qustodio uses a local VPN profile to route traffic through its filter. This is the standard method for browser-level filtering on Apple’s platform and does not send your data to an external server, but it does mean that other VPN apps cannot run simultaneously on the same device.
For most families, this will not be an issue, but it is worth knowing upfront.
5. Getting Started with Qustodio
I started at qustodio.com and clicked Get Started Free, which brought me to the account creation screen.

The signup form asked for a name, email address, and a password of at least eight characters. There is also a Terms of Service and Privacy Policy agreement to accept before creating the account. The whole process took under two minutes.

One thing worth clarifying upfront: the free account gives you permanent access to basic features on one device.
The trial gives you three days of full Premium access to evaluate the complete feature set. If you want to properly test everything Qustodio offers before deciding on a paid plan, those three days are the window you have.
Adding a child profile
After logging in, the dashboard showed a clean welcome screen prompting me to add my first device.
I clicked the plus button on the left sidebar, which revealed an Add a Child panel sliding in from the right.

The panel asked for the child’s first name, gender, and birth year. After clicking Next, the child’s profile appeared in the sidebar, and I was taken to the device setup screen.

Installing on a child’s device
The device setup screen asked which device my child uses, with a dropdown showing Android, iOS, Windows, and other options. The instructions that followed were the same regardless of platform, just three steps:
- Open the App Store or Google Play on the child’s device
- Download and log in to Kids App Qustodio
- Confirm that you want to protect the device and follow the steps on screen

The simplicity here is genuine. Qustodio handles the complexity inside the Kids App itself rather than making the parent work through a long permission checklist on screen.
Once the child’s device is connected, it appears in the parent dashboard immediately with the last activity timestamp visible.

The parent dashboard
The parent dashboard for each child has three sections: Dashboard, Timeline, and Rules.
The Dashboard shows a live status panel confirming that Qustodio is active and protection is running, a list of connected devices with their last activity time, and an Activity Summary covering today, 7 days, 15 days, or 30 days. Total screen time and screen time by hour are both visible from this view.
The Timeline is a chronological log of everything the child has done on their device, showing the app or site name, the time, and how long it was used.

During my own testing, I could see Roblox and Brave Browser entries from earlier that morning, each labeled with a Premium Control badge indicating they fall under managed categories.
The Rules section is where Qustodio’s depth becomes apparent.

Rules are presented as individual cards, each representing a distinct control area:
- Web filtering: Allow and block websites and content categories. The Categories tab lists options including Educational, Government, Entertainment, Search engines, News, Sports, Business, Health, AI, Technology, and Games, each with a three-dot menu to set allow, block, or alert rules.
- Games and apps: Allow, block, and set time limits for individual apps
- Daily time limits: Set the total daily screen time allowance
- Routines: Schedule custom rules for specific moments of the day such as school hours or bedtime
- Location: Monitor where your child is and has been. Available on Android and iOS.
- Social monitoring: See your child’s social media activity
- Calls and messages: See call details and message content. Available on Android and iOS.
- Panic button: Lets your child send an alert to trusted contacts. Available on Android only.
Spending ten minutes setting up Routines and Daily time limits at the start saves you from making reactive changes later when your child is already pushing against the defaults.
Verdict on getting started
Qustodio’s setup is well-designed. The account creation is simple, the child profile takes under a minute, and the three-step device installation is as clear as it can be without oversimplifying what is actually a fairly involved process happening inside the Kids App.
The three-day Premium trial is short compared to other products in this category, which means you need to be deliberate about testing the features that matter to your household during that window rather than exploring casually. The dashboard is clean, and the Rules section in particular gives you a clear picture of exactly what Qustodio can and cannot do before you commit to a paid plan.
6. Customer Support
Qustodio’s support structure is straightforward but comes with one condition worth knowing before you need it: submitting a help request requires a Premium subscription or a school account.
Free plan users are not able to access direct support through the Help Center form. That is a meaningful distinction given that the three-day trial gives most people their first experience with the product.
The main support channels are:
- Ticket form: The primary contact method, accessed through the Qustodio Help Center. Response time is stated as 1 to 2 business days. Premium subscribers receive priority response.
- Help Center: Available to all users at help.qustodio.com, with no login required to browse articles.
- There is no live chat option. All direct support goes through the ticket form.
Testing the ticket form
The form process runs across three steps: Log In, Issue Type, and Information.
After logging in with my account credentials, I was asked to choose a category. The options were Account and Billing, Configuration and Issues, and Suggestions.

I selected Configuration and Issues and was taken to the third step, which asked me to select the affected child profile and describe my question in as much detail as possible. The form also flagged that Qustodio Premium users receive priority support, with a link to learn more.

I typed my first question about text message content monitoring, selected the child profile Caleb, and clicked Submit. The confirmation screen appeared immediately: “Your support request was sent. You should receive an email confirmation immediately. We will get back to you within 1 to 2 business days.”

The Help Center
The Help Center at help.qustodio.com is organized into four topic areas:
- Get started: An introduction to what Qustodio does and how it works, aimed at new users
- My account: Subscription management, billing, account settings
- Features: Guides on time limits, content filtering, and specific monitoring tools
- Kids’ devices: Device setup instructions and troubleshooting by platform

The homepage also surfaces four quick-search topics at the top: Monitor calls and messages, School-managed devices, Supported platforms, and Time limits. These appear to reflect the questions Qustodio receives most frequently, which is useful context on its own.
I opened the article titled “What is additional parent and how does it work?” to assess the quality of the documentation. The article is detailed and well-structured, covering what an additional parent account can and cannot do, how to invite one, how to remove one, and what happens to their access if they upgrade or leave the account.
It includes screenshots of the actual interface and answers follow-up questions in a dedicated FAQ format below the main article.

The depth is genuine. This is not a one-paragraph answer linking elsewhere. It covers edge cases, including what happens if an additional parent pays for Premium separately and then leaves the account, and notes which platforms the additional parent feature is and is not yet available on.
Support channels summary
| Channel | Available | Notes |
| Ticket form | Premium subscribers only | 3-step process. Response within 1 to 2 business days. Priority for Premium users. |
| Help Center | All users | 4 topic categories, searchable, no login required. |
| Live chat | Not available | All direct support goes through the ticket form. |
Verdict on support
The most important thing to communicate about Qustodio’s support is what it is not: there is no live chat, no phone line, and no real-time help channel of any kind.
If something goes wrong during setup or a feature stops working, you are waiting up to two business days for a response. For a product that parents may be setting up urgently, that gap matters.
The Help Center compensates for this to a meaningful degree. The articles are detailed, well-written, and clearly maintained. The additional parent article I reviewed covers more ground than most parental control help documentation I have come across, and the interface screenshots are current rather than generic illustrations.
The Premium-only access to direct support is also worth flagging plainly. If you are evaluating Qustodio on the free plan or the three-day trial and encounter a problem, the ticket form is not available to you. The Help Center is your only resource during that window.
Is Qustodio Worth It?
Qustodio is the right product for families who want deep, cross-platform parental controls in one place. The feature breadth is genuinely hard to match at this price point.
The social media monitoring on Android is the standout capability for families with teenagers on Instagram, WhatsApp, or TikTok. For younger children who need content blocking and screen time limits, the Basic plan covers the essentials cleanly.
The limitations are worth stating plainly:
- Social media message alerts are Android-only, regardless of which plan you choose
- No independent third-party privacy audit has been published
- Direct support requires a Premium subscription and has a 1 to 2 business-day response time
For Android-primary households who want comprehensive oversight, Qustodio is one of the strongest tools available. For iOS-heavy families, verify which features work on iPhone before committing to the Complete plan.

