Kylie Kelce has stirred strong reactions from parents after sharing a rule she plans to enforce when her daughters are old enough to use mobile phones. On her podcast Not Gonna Lie with Kylie Kelce, the mom of four revealed a strategy she believes will help her family create a healthier relationship with technology.Instead of giving each child their own phone, Kelce says the family will have just one or two shared devices kept in the kitchen, on the main floor of the house. These phones will not be allowed in bedrooms, pockets, or private areas. They’ll stay out in the open, where all phone use happens in common view.She explained that her goal is to create a setup similar to what she and many others grew up with a landline in the kitchen, a shared phone that wasn’t glued to anyone’s hand. “We’re trying to treat it like how phones were when we were younger,” she said. “It stays in one place and it’s there when you need it, not something you’re fused to.”
Reactions from parents: support, nostalgia, and some skepticism
The idea has sparked a mix of praise and concern. Many parents applauded Kelce’s approach, calling it a smart way to encourage mindful phone habits and reduce constant screen time. Several said they grew up in homes where the family shared one phone in a central location and saw value in returning to that model.“It brings back memories of the kitchen phone with the long cord,” one person commented. “You had to be thoughtful about every call because everyone could hear you.”Others said they had already adopted similar rules at home like keeping devices in shared spaces or limiting internet access and had seen positive effects on their children’s behavior.But not everyone is convinced the system will work, especially as children get older. Critics pointed out that teens are often good at finding workarounds, whether by using friends’ phones, borrowing school devices, or creating hidden social media accounts. Some also raised concerns about how a shared phone would function with busy after-school schedules, group chats, or the need for privacy during sensitive conversations.Several parents also questioned how monitoring and safety would be handled without individual supervision tools or parental controls that come with personal devices.Looking for balance in a digital worldSome families suggested alternative solutions, such as child-safe phones like Gabb or Pinwheel, which allow texting and calling but block internet access and apps. These phones give kids some independence while limiting exposure to social media and online risks.The discussion around Kelce’s rule reflects a broader challenge many families face how to allow children access to technology without letting it take over their lives. With phones and social media so embedded in modern life, parents are constantly asking how much is too much and what boundaries will actually stick.Whether Kelce’s “kitchen phone” idea becomes a widely adopted model or simply sparks conversation, it clearly hit a nerve. In a time when devices are nearly always within reach, her effort to slow things down and bring phone use back into public family spaces is making people think again about how they want to raise kids in the digital age.