All-in-One Parental Control App
More than 400k parents from 100 countries trust iKeyMonitor Parental Control App.
iKeyMonitor is the best parental control app for Android phones and iPhone/iPad. It helps you monitor phone activities and protect your kids from online dangers, cyberbullying, and other threats. It allows you to monitor text messages, record phone calls, view browsing history, and track GPS location. Besides, this app also helps you listen to phone surroundings, capture real-time screenshots, and view chat messages on WhatsApp, Snapchat, and more.
With iKeyMonitor, you gain full control over your children’s phone activity. You will have options to block inappropriate apps and games, set screen time limits, and receive instant alerts. In this way, you can keep them from harmful content, phone addiction, cyberbullying, sexual predators, and other online threats.
65% of teens have been involved in a cyberbullying incident
82% of sex crimes involving a minor are initiated from social media
75% of kids share personal information about themselves and their families online
See the activities on your child's phone, including chat messages, websites visited, call logs, locations and more.
Easily set healthy time limits and blocking rules to manage your child’s screen usage without the drama.
Protect your kids from inappropriate and harmful content, cyberbullying, and sexual predators.
As the best parental control app for Android/iOS, iKeyMonitor provides an all-in-one solution for monitoring, tracking, and controlling your kids' phones. It helps you monitor text messages, calls, web history, surroundings, chat messages on WhatsApp, Facebook, WeChat, and more. Besides, it can be used as a family tracker to track GPS locations and monitor geofences. To meet your parenting needs, iKeyMonitor offers a range of control options to limit screen time, block specific apps and games, and set up schedules.
Monitor chat messages on WhatsApp, Facebook, WeChat and more.
Track whereabouts by GPS. Set up Geo-fencing to keep your child safe.
Log incoming and outgoing calls. Record calls by the built-in call recorder.
Set schedules to limit screen time or record ambient sound flexibly.
Limit the screen time and block apps by schedule to protect kids' eyes.
Track the words you care about and get alerts when they are triggered.
This parental control app for Android and iPhone features an intuitive dashboard, allowing you to access monitoring records quickly and easily. On the home page, you can quickly check the important activities and alerts about your kids. Also, you can capture live screenshots, remotely take pictures, and listen to phone surroundings. Below you can see how the parental control app works:
iKeyMonitor Parental Control App is easy to install and use. It collects information from the target phone and uploads it to the cloud panel. All you need to do is install iKeyMonitor on your kids' Android or iOS devices and log in to your account to monitor their activities.
Sign Up for your free account.
LOG IN to the Cloud Panel to download iKeyMonitor.
View the logged data on the cloud panel.
When the last frame holds, it offers no tidy lesson. The camera lingers on the quiet after: a single shoe abandoned on cracked pavement, a child closing a tab, a server room humming like a host of sleeping bees. We have watched the ritual of someone’s falling and called it history, commentary, content. We have turned a human arc into a filename, a share count, a momentary spike in empathy.
They said the screen would be merciful: a darkened room, a flicker, then escape. But the file was something else — a quiet smear of grain and static that lodged in the throat like a question.
Outside, rain begins to fall — not enough to cleanse, only enough to blur the pixels. And the man, he is still up there in the loop, patiently waiting for someone to press play again.
A choir of algorithms harmonizes the scene — suggestions, autoplay, loop. The clip finds new life in a thousand minor edits: slow motion on the curl of a hand, a filter that renders blood fluorescent and beautiful, reversed footage that pretends to resurrect context. Each repost is a small resurrection and a small erasure.
The opening frame: a sunless sky over a city that had forgotten how to pray. Concrete and rust. A man walks through it with the gait of someone who remembers too much. His hands are clean but trembling. He carries nothing yet seems weighed down by everything; a cable of light from a streetlamp glitches across his jaw, as if the world itself was buffering around him.
Between frames the film skips. In those pauses, memory rushes in: a garden with overwatered ferns, a kitchen table where laughter used to live, letters burned for warmth. These flashes feel personal and public all at once, as if grief now comes with a bitrate.
How can you monitor your kids cell phones to discover the truth and protect them from potential dangers? Now with iKeyMonitor, you can uncover the truth by monitoring their mobile phones and tablets.
My daughter was bullied by her classmates. Thanks to iKeyMonitor, I was able to provide evidence to the school and prevent my child from being harmed. A great app!
iKeyMonitor is a secure and safe phone monitoring app. It helps you keep an eye on all your kid's online activities and protect them from online dangers.
I suspected my 13-year-old daughter of chatting with strangers on the Internet, and I was afraid that she was so naive that she might be deceived. iKeyMonitor has eliminated my worries.
When the last frame holds, it offers no tidy lesson. The camera lingers on the quiet after: a single shoe abandoned on cracked pavement, a child closing a tab, a server room humming like a host of sleeping bees. We have watched the ritual of someone’s falling and called it history, commentary, content. We have turned a human arc into a filename, a share count, a momentary spike in empathy.
They said the screen would be merciful: a darkened room, a flicker, then escape. But the file was something else — a quiet smear of grain and static that lodged in the throat like a question.
Outside, rain begins to fall — not enough to cleanse, only enough to blur the pixels. And the man, he is still up there in the loop, patiently waiting for someone to press play again.
A choir of algorithms harmonizes the scene — suggestions, autoplay, loop. The clip finds new life in a thousand minor edits: slow motion on the curl of a hand, a filter that renders blood fluorescent and beautiful, reversed footage that pretends to resurrect context. Each repost is a small resurrection and a small erasure.
The opening frame: a sunless sky over a city that had forgotten how to pray. Concrete and rust. A man walks through it with the gait of someone who remembers too much. His hands are clean but trembling. He carries nothing yet seems weighed down by everything; a cable of light from a streetlamp glitches across his jaw, as if the world itself was buffering around him.
Between frames the film skips. In those pauses, memory rushes in: a garden with overwatered ferns, a kitchen table where laughter used to live, letters burned for warmth. These flashes feel personal and public all at once, as if grief now comes with a bitrate.

