Mandatory ID checks to stop children using sunbeds have been proposed in new laws under consultation.
The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said teenagers often get around existing rules barring under-18s from using sunbeds âthrough using contactless systems that let anyone tap and tan without any checks by a staff memberâ.
The new proposals, being consulted on by the Government from Friday, would require staff to be present and check a customerâs ID before they can use a sunbed.
The crackdown would also mean health warnings must be clearly displayed, and âdangerous claims that sunbeds help with weight loss or prevent sunburn would be bannedâ, DHSC said ahead of the 12-week consultation.
Public health and prevention minister Sharon Hodgson said: âSunbeds cause cancer and yet children as young as 14 are still accessing them illegally. That is not acceptable.
âWeâre closing the ways in which businesses could get away with this, and making sure anyone who uses a sunbed knows exactly what theyâre risking.
âStopping cancer before it starts is the best thing we can do for families and the NHS.â
The public, businesses, local authorities, and experts have until the end of the consultation period to have their say, with new rules potentially in place as early as next year.
The Government will also look at whether tougher action is needed, with a call for evidence launching in autumn 2026.
Professor Peter Johnson, national clinical director for cancer at NHS England, said: âSunbeds are not a harmless shortcut to a tan â we know they are a cancer risk, and under-18s should not be using them at all.
âThese proposals would help prevent unscrupulous operators from providing sunbeds to children and make sure that adults understand the risks before they use one.â
In 2023 there were almost a quarter of a million new skin cancer diagnoses in the UK, costing the NHS an estimated ÂŁ750 million annually.
The crackdown is part of the Governmentâs national cancer plan, with an ambition to see one in three cancer patients cancer-free or living well five years after diagnosis.
Marie Tudor, chief executive of Skcin skin cancer charity, said the consultation was âextremely encouragingâ.
Ms Tudor added: âWith skin cancer now the most common cancer in the UK, and evidence showing the risks increase significantly when sunbed use begins at a young age, stronger regulation is urgently needed.
âMandatory ID checks, clearer health warnings, and tighter controls on misleading health claims are positive and necessary steps towards improving public safety, raising awareness, and helping to prevent future skin cancer cases.â
Jules Worrall, interim chief executive at Teenage Cancer Trust, said âif enforced, these new proposals could protect more teenagers and young adultsâ.
Ms Worrall added: âWe strongly recommend that sunbeds are avoided and want to ensure that teenagers and young adults are informed about the risks.
âSo weâre pleased that the consultation aims to strengthen health warnings, as well as crack down on ID checks, because we are deeply concerned about the level of harmful misinformation easily available promoting so-called âbenefitsâ about sunbeds.â
Susanna Daniels, chief executive of Melanoma Focus, said: âYoung skin is especially vulnerable to the risks of sunbeds, and research has shown that a single exposure to indoor tanning before the age of 35 years is associated with a 59% increased risk of developing melanoma.â