
Why parents leave Kinzoo
- Limited social graph. Kinzoo only works when both sides have an account, which means convincing grandparents, cousins, and school friends to join a platform they have never heard of. Most families hit a wall within weeks when key contacts refuse to sign up.
- Soft monetisation of kids’ attention. The in-app Zoonies currency and the companion marketplace introduce reward loops that feel aimed at encouraging repeat opens and spending, which sits uncomfortably with parents who chose Kinzoo specifically to keep commercial pressure away from their children.
- Inconsistent video call quality. On anything short of a strong Wi-Fi connection, calls drop or stutter noticeably. Competing apps with larger infrastructure budgets handle patchy 4G noticeably better.
- Parental controls lack granularity. The parent dashboard lets you approve contacts and block the app, but it does not offer per-feature toggles (for example, disabling stickers or media sharing independently), which parents of younger children often want.
- Kids age out quickly. Around eight or nine, children start noticing that their friends are on WhatsApp, Discord, or other mainstream platforms. Kinzoo offers no natural upgrade path, so families end up maintaining two parallel apps. If any of these gaps applies to your household, the 7 Kinzoo alternatives below are worth a close look.
Which app should you choose?
- Messenger Kids if your child is under 10 and your family already uses Facebook Messenger to stay in touch. Parent-approved contacts only, no ads, and no in-app purchases.
- JusTalk Kids if you want video calls with a fun, sticker-heavy interface and simple parental approval flow. Works well for ages 4 to 10.
- Xooloo Kids Messenger if your child is under 7 and you want to eliminate free-text typing entirely. The sentence-builder UI prevents both accidental and intentional inappropriate messages.
- Marco Polo if grandparents or extended family are involved and synchronous calls are hard to schedule. The video walkie-talkie format works across generations without requiring everyone to be online at the same time.
- WhatsApp if the wider family already lives on WhatsApp and a dedicated kids app is impractical. Requires active parental supervision — it is not a kids app.
- Signal if your child is 13 or older and privacy is the primary concern. No ads, no data profiling, and end-to-end encryption by default.
- Discord if your child is a teenager and already part of gaming or hobby communities. Family Centre gives parents a monitoring dashboard, but this is still a general-purpose platform.
Stay on Kinzoo if your child is between 4 and 7, their approved contacts are all willing to create an account, and you want a fully enclosed environment with no path to mainstream social features.
Comparison table
| App | Best for age | Free plan | Parent control | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Messenger Kids | 6 — 12 | Yes (free) | Parent-approved contacts, activity dashboard | No ads, no in-app purchases |
| JusTalk Kids | 4 — 10 | Yes (limited) | Contact approval, time limits | Video calls with animated stickers |
| Xooloo Kids Messenger | 4 — 7 | Freemium | Full message review, no free typing | Sentence-builder replaces keyboard |
| Marco Polo | 6 + | Yes (limited) | Contact list managed by parent | Async video messages, no live scheduling needed |
| 13 + | Yes (free) | None built-in — parent supervision only | Widest family reach, 2 billion users | |
| Signal | 13 + | Yes (free) | None built-in — parent supervision only | End-to-end encryption, zero data harvesting |
| Discord | 13 + | Yes (freemium) | Family Centre dashboard | Teens already there; server-based communities |
1. Messenger Kids -- parent-controlled messaging for under-13s
Messenger Kids is Meta’s child-safe layer on top of the Messenger infrastructure. Children can send messages, make video calls, and share stickers only with contacts that a parent has explicitly approved — there is no way for a stranger to reach a child without that approval step. The app contains no advertisements and no in-app purchase flow, which removes the commercial pressure that makes some families uncomfortable with Kinzoo.
Kinzoo vs Messenger Kids on contact safety, Messenger Kids wins because the approval workflow is tightly enforced and backed by Meta’s Trust and Safety team. Kinzoo wins when you want to stay completely outside Meta’s data infrastructure, since Messenger Kids is linked to a parent’s Facebook account.
Advantages:
- No ads and no in-app purchases
- Parent approval required for every contact
- Works on iOS and Android with a shared parent dashboard
- Video calls are stable on mobile data
Disadvantages:
- Requires a parent to have a Facebook account
- Meta collects some usage data even in the kids product
- Limited to under-13s — no clear upgrade path within the same app
Pricing: Free with no paid tier.
2. JusTalk Kids -- video calls with parental approval flow
JusTalk Kids strips the parent app JusTalk down to the features that make sense for young children: video calls, voice messages, and a sticker keyboard. Parents set up an account, approve every contact individually, and can review call history from a linked dashboard. The visual design leans into bright colours and characters that keep younger children engaged without feeling predatory.
Kinzoo vs JusTalk Kids on social graph reach, JusTalk Kids wins because it draws from a larger existing user base and is available in more countries. Kinzoo wins if you specifically want the Zoonies-and-missions engagement layer that JusTalk Kids deliberately omits.
Advantages:
- Contact approval built into the parent flow
- Video calls hold up on 4G
- Sticker-heavy interface appeals to ages 4 to 10
- Available on both Android and iOS
Disadvantages:
- Free tier limits daily call minutes
- Some premium sticker packs require purchase
- Dashboard is less polished than Messenger Kids’ parent centre
Pricing: Free with limited daily usage; premium plan unlocks unlimited calls.
3. Xooloo Kids Messenger -- sentence builder for the youngest kids
Xooloo Kids Messenger is built around the idea that children under seven should not have access to a free-text keyboard at all. Instead, kids compose messages by selecting pre-built sentence fragments and emoji-style illustrations, which means accidental or intentional inappropriate content is structurally impossible. Parents can review all messages and manage the contact list from a linked account.
Kinzoo vs Xooloo on message safety for very young children, Xooloo wins decisively because the sentence-builder eliminates the risk of a child typing or receiving something harmful. Kinzoo wins once a child is old enough to need genuine back-and-forth conversation that the sentence builder would frustrate.
Advantages:
- No free-text keyboard — content is inherently controlled
- Full message review for parents
- Designed for ages 4 to 7 specifically
- No social feed or public profile
Disadvantages:
- Sentence-builder becomes limiting quickly as children grow
- Smaller user base makes it harder to get contacts on board
- Freemium model limits the number of contacts on the free tier
Pricing: Freemium; a subscription unlocks more contacts and message templates.
4. Marco Polo -- async video for families across time zones
Marco Polo works like a video walkie-talkie: you record a short video clip and the recipient watches and replies whenever convenient. This async format removes the scheduling friction that kills live video calls with grandparents or relatives in different time zones. The app is used across generations, which is the key difference from purpose-built kids apps — one platform serves both the child and every adult in the family.
Kinzoo vs Marco Polo on multi-generational reach, Marco Polo wins clearly because older relatives find the video message format intuitive without needing to learn a new interface. Kinzoo wins when you need real-time interaction rather than async clips.
Advantages:
- Async format removes scheduling pressure
- Works well for grandparents and extended family
- Contact list is fully controlled — closed network
- No ads on the core product
Disadvantages:
- Not purpose-built as a kids app — no dedicated parental dashboard
- Premium plan required for features like filters and longer video storage
- The open reply chain can expose a child to any approved contact’s content
Pricing: Free with limited storage; Marco Polo Plus adds extended storage and filters for a modest monthly fee.
5. WhatsApp -- family fallback that requires active supervision
WhatsApp is a general-purpose messaging platform with no parental controls built in. We include it here only because many families already use it across all generations and asking every relative to install a separate kids app is genuinely impractical. If you use WhatsApp with a child, a parent must manage the account directly, control who the child messages, and regularly review the chat history — none of this is automated.
Kinzoo vs WhatsApp on safety by default, Kinzoo wins comfortably because it has an enclosed environment; WhatsApp requires the parent to build that enclosure manually. WhatsApp wins on social graph — if the whole family is already there, it is the only realistic option.
Advantages:
- Largest family reach of any app on this list
- End-to-end encryption on all messages and calls
- Runs on very low-end Android devices
- No subscription cost
Disadvantages:
- No parental controls or child-specific features
- Requires active supervision — not a passive safety tool
- Meta collects metadata even though message content is encrypted
- Minimum age is 13 in most jurisdictions
Pricing: Free.
6. Signal -- encrypted privacy for older kids and teens
Signal is a general-purpose encrypted messenger with no advertisements, no data profiling, and no tracking. It is not a kids app and carries no parental control features. We list it here because privacy-aware parents of teenagers (13+) often choose Signal as a deliberate step away from platforms that monetise attention — the absence of algorithmic feeds and ads is the point.
Kinzoo vs Signal on privacy, Signal wins by a wide margin because it collects essentially no metadata and stores nothing on its servers beyond delivery receipts. Kinzoo wins for younger children because Signal provides zero guardrails — it is entirely unsuitable for under-13s without constant hands-on supervision.
Advantages:
- End-to-end encryption by default for all messages, calls, and files
- No ads, no data harvesting, no profiling
- Note-to-Self feature works as a private scratchpad for older kids
- Open-source and independently audited
Disadvantages:
- No parental controls of any kind
- Minimum age 13 — not appropriate for younger children
- Smaller contact network than WhatsApp means persuading contacts to switch
- Disappearing messages can make parental review difficult
Pricing: Free, donation-supported.
7. Discord (Family Centre) -- supervised platform for teenagers
Discord is a general-purpose communication platform built around servers and communities, and it is where a large proportion of teenagers aged 13 to 18 already spend time. It is not a kids app. Discord does offer a Family Centre feature that lets a parent link their own account to a teen’s account and receive a weekly digest of servers joined, new friends added, and apps used — but this is a monitoring layer, not a content filter or contact control. Families should set up Family Centre before handing the app to a teenager, not after.
Kinzoo vs Discord on age-appropriateness, Kinzoo wins for children under 13 because Discord’s minimum age is 13 and its server environment exposes users to communities that range from entirely appropriate to adult. Discord wins when a teenager is already embedded in gaming or hobby communities and a purpose-built kids app would simply be ignored.
Advantages:
- Family Centre provides a weekly activity digest for parents
- Free tier covers all core messaging and voice features
- Huge variety of moderated community servers for teen interests
- Voice channel quality is among the best of any platform
Disadvantages:
- Minimum age 13 — inappropriate for younger children
- Family Centre is monitoring, not control — parents cannot block servers from the dashboard
- Exposure to unmoderated public servers is a real risk without guidance
- Screen time and engagement design is optimised for long sessions
Pricing: Free with a Nitro subscription for cosmetic extras; Family Centre is free.
FAQ
Is Messenger Kids a better Kinzoo alternative than JusTalk Kids?
For most families with children between 6 and 12, Messenger Kids is the stronger choice because its parental controls are more thorough and the app is entirely free with no upsells. JusTalk Kids is worth considering if your family wants to stay outside Meta’s infrastructure or if your child is younger and responds better to JusTalk’s character-driven visual design.
What’s the safest messenger for kids under 10?
Xooloo Kids Messenger is the most structurally safe option for children under 7 because the sentence-builder eliminates free-text entirely. For ages 7 to 10, Messenger Kids offers a better balance of safety and natural conversation. Both require a parent to actively manage the approved contact list — no app is safe without that step.
Are there any free Kinzoo alternatives?
Yes. Messenger Kids is completely free with no paid tier. Marco Polo and JusTalk Kids have free plans with usage limits. Signal and WhatsApp are free with no paid options at all. Xooloo Kids Messenger and Discord both have free tiers, though each unlocks additional features through a subscription.
Can parents supervise WhatsApp or Discord for a child?
WhatsApp has no built-in parental controls — supervision means a parent manually reviews chats and manages who the child can contact. Discord’s Family Centre gives parents a weekly activity summary showing servers joined and new friends added, but it does not allow a parent to block content or approve contacts remotely. Both platforms require minimum age 13 under their terms of service, and neither should be treated as a supervised kids environment without consistent, hands-on parental involvement.
At what age should a child move from Kinzoo to a mainstream messenger?
There is no single right answer, but many families start the transition around 11 to 13, when a child’s peer group has largely moved to WhatsApp or similar platforms and remaining on a kids app creates social friction. A practical approach is to move to a supervised WhatsApp group first — where a parent is a member of every chat — before granting more independent access at 14 or 15. Signal is a reasonable choice for privacy-conscious families at that stage.