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Amazon lets teens shop on their own

Online retailer Amazon.com is allowing those aged between 13 to 17 to shop on their own by allowing parents to add up to four teens to their accounts.

Remember when your parents first let you shop at the mall by yourself? Amazon is trying to replicate that feeling for the digital generation.

The online retail giant said on Wednesday that teens can now shop at Amazon on their own, if their parents let them.

Adults can add up to four teenagers to their account, giving youngsters their own login information to buy stuff from the Amazon app. Parents can set spending limits, cancel orders and get notifications when something is bought.

The move by the company comes at an already rough time for mall stores that catered to teens. Abercrombie & Fitch's revenue, for example, has fallen every year since 2014. And some teen retailers have filed for bankruptcy protection, including Aeropostale and Wet Seal.

Amazon.com said the new program is only for teens between the ages of 13 and 17. And the company said kids won't be able to see their parent's credit card information.

There's no extra cost to use it and parents don't need to have a Prime membership to add teens to their accounts. But if they do pay for Prime, teens will also get access to free shipping, streaming video and Prime's other perks.


2 min read

Published

Source: AAP


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