Your iPhone is getting enhanced Bluetooth tracking with iOS 27 - but there's a catch
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This year's WWDC is over, and now it's time for developers to fine-tune their apps and for early adopters to test them ahead of this fall's public launch of iOS 27. AI dominated the conversation, serving as the foundation for upgrades to Siri, Search, Photos , and more, while some upgrades didn't make it to the keynote.
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One less-discussed iOS 27 feature is support for Channel Sounding , an innovative Bluetooth feature first announced in Bluetooth 6.0, which was released in the fall of 2024. Channel Sounding enables a Bluetooth-enabled device to perform precise localization, enhancing its spatial awareness of distance and direction.
Thanks to Bluetooth's ubiquity and Apple's support for Channel Sounding , some of the world's most popular smartphones will support enhanced location compatibility with third-party Bluetooth headphones, smart locks, trackers, wallets, digital keys, and other location-based peripheral devices.
Like always, it wouldn't be an emerging Bluetooth technology if there weren't a few caveats. More on that in a bit.
Channel Sounding's most valuable benefit to consumers is its ability to democratize the Find My network. In a perfect world, all the devices you'd like to keep tabs on can be easily found in the Find My app, with exact distance and direction measurements, regardless of manufacturer. Channel Sounding aims to make this dream a reality.
With Channel Sounding , iPhone users can expect improved device-tracking functionality with third-party headphones, earbuds, Bluetooth trackers, and more.
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As smartphones become digital keys for cars, smart locks, and safes, Channel Sounding promises secure, "centimeter-level accuracy" in location technology, ensuring that only your device can act as a key when within a specific range.
Currently, Apple's Find My Device feature works best with other Apple devices, specifically those with an ultra-wideband (UWB) chip. If you open Find My to look for your AirPods Pro 3, the Find feature that helps you track them down is enabled by the UWB chips in your iPhone and your AirPods. In its current state, Bluetooth is what can help with general directions, and UWB offers accurate direction and distance.
Conversely, if you misplace your Powerbeats Pro 2, Bluetooth steps in. You can only see where your Powerbeats were last connected to your iPhone via Bluetooth, since the Powerbeats lack a UWB chip.
Source: ZDNet