The Pinwheel Home landline phone is built for children aged 5 to 10, voice calls only, no social feed, no browser, and no screen-time spiral. The kid-focused technology company announced the launch this week, pitching it as a bridge between borrowing a parent’s phone and eventually owning a smartphone.
The timing is deliberate. Pinwheel already sells child-friendly smartphones and added a smartwatch last year. Home sits at the younger end of that product arc, designed for households where parents want their children to practise basic communication skills without the risks that come packaged with a connected screen.
From a Father’s Frustration to a Growing Product Line
Pinwheel was founded in 2019 by CEO Dane Witbeck, a father of four, after his 8-year-old son’s best friend received an iPhone. The first Pinwheel phone reached customers in 2020, and according to the company’s own media resources, Pinwheel was recognised by Inc. 5000 in 2024 as one of the country’s fastest-growing private companies and the fastest-growing kids’ phone company on that list. The company now serves tens of thousands of families across the US, UK, Canada, and Australia.
Home is its most stripped-back device yet. It operates over Wi-Fi rather than a traditional phone line, so there is no need for a phone jack. Two models are available. The Spark, which features a smaller, lightweight handset, starts at $68 and comes in white, black, blue, and purple. The Classic costs $79, includes a retro-style handset and customisable stickers, and is available in pink, black, and white.
Both models include free 911 calls and free calls between Pinwheel Home devices via the company’s Pinwheel Circle service, with management through the Caregiver Portal, as detailed on the Pinwheel Home product page. For calls to standard phone numbers, families can choose a Friends and Family plan starting at $6.99 per month for up to five approved contacts, or $9.99 per month for unlimited calling. Families running multiple devices receive a 15% discount on additional subscriptions.
The Pinwheel Home Landline Phone and the Screen-Time Debate
The launch arrives against a backdrop of genuine parental anxiety and a growing body of research. A study from the University of Georgia, led by postdoctoral fellow Cory Carvalho, drew on a nationwide survey of more than 10,000 young people and found that frequent social media use starting around age ten can stunt vocabulary growth. The research, which tracked participants across four years, found that adolescents using social media for more than eight hours a day risk having their brains adapt to that usage pattern, affecting their capacity to recognise and pronounce words.
Countries are beginning to act on such findings. Australia has already restricted social media access for children, and the UK has announced plans for comparable measures. Pinwheel Home positions itself squarely within that regulatory and cultural shift.
Parents manage the device through the Caregiver Portal, where they can approve contacts, block unknown callers, spam, and robocalls, and set calling schedules and time limits. Speed dial and voicemail are included. Future updates are planned to introduce three-way calling and to link Home with Pinwheel’s watches and smartphones, letting children use a single phone number across devices while still keeping screens out of the home environment.
Pinwheel Home is not without competition. Tin Can, a $100 Wi-Fi-enabled landline, gives parents similar contact-management controls through a companion app. Calls between Tin Can devices are free, and its friends and family plan also runs at $9.99 per month, matching Pinwheel’s unlimited tier.
Pinwheel Home is on sale now through the company’s website, with an Amazon listing expected this autumn. For Witbeck and the parents already in the Pinwheel ecosystem, the sharper question is whether a voice-only device can hold its ground once a child’s classmates start arriving at school with smartphones. The answer will come in the data from those tens of thousands of families.
