<p dir="ltr">Objective: This paper presents methodological reflections on the ethical challenges of researching children’s everyday lives in a digital context, drawing on two studies from different international contexts: the UK (Everyday Childhoods) and Türkiye (Children’s Individual Privacy at Home and in Digital Environments). </p><p dir="ltr">Method: Both were qualitative, ethnographic studies concerned with how we can study the digital lives of children in situ – within family relationships, educational settings and the social/leisure worlds of young people. </p><p dir="ltr">Results and Conclusion: In exploring children’s digital lives across these different spaces, we encountered numerous challenges and tensions that shaped the possibilities of making children’s digital lives researchable. In particular this involved navigating the moral concerns of what is considered ‘healthy’, ‘educational’ and ‘appropriate’ digital practices by adults in children’s lives, and children’s concerns of having their digital lives researched by adults. By bringing these studies into conversation with each other, we seek to draw out some of the key learnings about the challenges of researching this increasingly prominent aspect of children’s everyday lives as a moral landscape. By taking two studies from different international contexts, we also consider how dialogues between the studies can generate insights into the particular politics of researching children’s digital lives within particular places and cultures.</p><p dir="ltr"><br></p>