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iOS 16
Version of the iOS operating system
A picture of the iOS 16 home screen
iOS 16 home screen on an iPhone 14 Pro
DeveloperApple
General
availability
September 12, 2022; 3 years ago (2022-09-12)
Latest release16.7.12[1] (September 15, 2025; 49 days ago (2025-09-15)) [±]
Available in41 languages[2]
Kernel typeHybrid (XNU)
LicenseProprietary software with open-source components
Preceded byiOS 15
Succeeded byiOS 17
Official websiteiOS 16 at the Wayback Machine (archived August 2, 2023)
TaglinePersonal is powerful.
Support status
Receiving security updates for devices that cannot be updated to iOS 17 or later. Widespread third-party app support. Drops support for all devices with an A9 or A10 Fusion SoC, including the iPhone 6s/6s Plus, iPhone SE (1st generation), iPhone 7/7 Plus, and iPod Touch (7th generation).
Articles in the series
iPadOS 16 (derivative for iPad)

iOS 16 is the sixteenth major release of Apple's iOS mobile operating system for the iPhone. It is the successor of iOS 15, and was announced at the company's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 6, 2022, alongside iPadOS 16,[3] and released on September 12, 2022. It was succeeded by iOS 17 on September 18, 2023.

It is the first iOS release since iPhone OS 1 to be exclusive to iPhones, as it drops support for the seventh-generation iPod Touch. The iPhone 7 and 7 Plus, iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, and first-generation iPhone SE would also be dropped. It is also the final iOS release to support the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus and iPhone X, as iOS 17 dropped support for these iPhones in 2023.[4]

System features

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Freeform

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Freeform is a whiteboard app that lets users collaborate together in real time. The whiteboard is an "Infinite" space where users can draw, import files, FaceTime, message, all fluently in sync.

AirDrop

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In iOS 16.2, the default setting is "Contacts Only", and the "Everyone" setting was changed to "Everyone for 10 Minutes," which reverts to "Contacts Only" after 10 minutes[5] "to prevent unwanted requests to receive content."[6] This was enabled in iOS 16.1.1 for iPhones in China.[7]

Lock screen

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  • The lock screen's appearance is customizable and can host Widgets. The font and text color for the date and time can be customized to 8 presets and color effects can be applied to the entire lock screen. The date is now above the time and a small widget can be added next to the date. Other widgets can be added and arranged horizontally on the third row, below the time.
  • Multiple lock screens can be set up.
  • Live wallpapers have been removed because of the new tap and hold gesture that would allow users to customize their lock screen.
  • The lock screen also supports landscape mode, arranging elements horizontally instead of vertically when the phone orientation is horizontal.
  • When listening to podcasts and music, tapping the album cover will cause the cover to appear full-sized in the center of the lock screen with a color-matched background.

Improved focus mode

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  • Different lock screens can be set up based on the active focus.
  • Focus filters allow apps to show different content based on active focus. For example, Safari will only show work-related tabs if the user enables 'Work focus'. Likewise, the Mail app will only show email messages from an allowed list of work contacts.
  • The user can create lists of apps and contacts to be silenced and lists of those to be allowed.

Notifications

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  • Notifications roll up from below the lock screen, rather than above.
  • It is possible to show notifications in three different styles: count, stack or list. Notifications can be grouped together with two fingers to reduce them to a counter.
  • "Live Activities" show a UI within a large notification that always stays on screen, and continuously updates to show users real time activity. (Useful for watching the score of a sports game live when the user is not watching, etc.)

Control Center

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  • A new drop-down menu in Control Center shows all apps that have recently accessed the camera, microphone or location, new control center toggle for quick notes.
  • The sound recognition Shazam feature integrates its history with the main Shazam application's history, instead of the histories being separated.

Status bar

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The status bar can display the battery percentage on iPhones with Face ID, so the user doesn't need to pull-down the Control Center to see it.

Improved dictation

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During text dictation, the keyboard is always present and allows the user to switch from speech to manual typing and vice versa without interruptions. It is also possible to insert emojis through dictation. Auto-Punctuation automatically inserts a period when there is a pause in the dictation.

Improved Live Text

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  • Ability to select and manipulate text in videos.
  • Quick actions are commands available directly on the Live Text. It is possible to make price conversions to another currency or translate text on the fly.
  • Support expanded to Japanese, Korean, and Ukrainian.
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  • Visual Search is able to extract objects and people recognized in photos; they can be interacted with to do things such as drag and drop them into other apps.

Siri improvements

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  • It is possible to end cellular and FaceTime calls by simply saying "Hey Siri, hang up".
  • Siri can announce notifications on speaker.

Spotlight

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  • A new button to access Spotlight directly from the Home Screen.
  • The search input text box is now anchored to the keyboard, instead of being at the top, in order to be more accessible using the phone with one hand.
  • More image results from apps like Messages, Notes, and Files.
  • Quick actions like starting a timer or running a shortcut.

Translate

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Spoken Content

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Improved accessibility

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  • Door detection is a feature that allows visually impaired people to be guided by the camera. It is able to recognize the presence of a door and signals how many meters away it is.
  • A new accessibility setting allows the user to prevent phone calls from being ended by locking the phone.

Wi-Fi network improvements

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Previously saved Wi-Fi networks are shown which can be edited, deleted or selected to view the network password after authentication via Face ID or Touch ID. Prior to this change, users’ only option for removing previously connected-to networks was to tap ‘forget this network’ from within the settings app which could only be done if connected to that network. Users also had (and still have) the ability to wipe all previously known networks from their iOS devices by choosing ‘erase network settings’ from Settings–>General–>Transfer or reset iPhone(at bottom)–>Reset–>Reset Network Settings. The latter option is frequently advised to those seeking to fix a multitude of both Wi-Fi and cellular network issues arising on users iOS devices.

Cellular network improvements

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During the configuration of the Cellular Network, the eSIM from another iPhone can be transferred via Bluetooth.

Backup

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Backups to iCloud can also be made on 4G, alongside 5G and Wi-Fi.

Face ID

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Face ID works when the phone is oriented horizontally. It is limited to the iPhone 13 and later.

Keyboard

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Haptic feedback can be enabled for the keyboard; while typing text a small vibration can be felt which simulates the pressing of mechanical keys.

Controller support

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iOS 16, iPadOS 16, and tvOS 16 have support for connecting Nintendo Switch Joy-Con and Pro Controllers.[8]

Augmented reality

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A new framework dubbed RoomPlan will allow apps to quickly create 3D floor plans of rooms using the LiDAR Scanner introduced with the iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max.[9]

App features

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Messages

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  • Sent messages can be edited within 15 minutes and can be deleted within 2 minutes.
  • Ability to mark an entire discussion as unread.
  • SharePlay is now available in the Messages app to watch a movie or listen to music with friends, without requiring them to make a FaceTime call.
  • Recover deleted messages for up to 30 days.
  • Collaboration: ability to invite someone to work on a project, so that every time someone edits a shared document, the user receives updates in a thread of the Messages app. It works with iOS apps such as Files, Keynote, Numbers, Pages, Notes, Reminders, Safari, and third-party apps designed to take advantage of this Collaboration feature.
  • On audio messages previously sent or received, users can swipe with the finger on the sound wave graph to position at the exact point.
  • Ability to report SMS/MMS junk to carriers.

FaceTime

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Live Captions automatically transcribes what is said during a FaceTime call.

Mail

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  • Mail messages can be scheduled to be sent later.
  • Recently 'sent' emails can be canceled within ten seconds.
  • Ability to put on top and set a reminder for messages the user hasn't responded to yet.
  • Improved search corrects typos based on the content of their messages.
  • New rich links give email messages more context and details at a glance.

Maps

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  • Multi-stop routing is now available. Multiple intermediate stops can be added to routes, with a maximum of 15 stops. Users can also ask Siri to add a new stop point while they are navigating.[10]
  • Pay in Transit, now can calculate cost of fares.
  • New MapKit features supporting Look Around and the Detailed City Experience.

Photos

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  • Photos can be shared from the user’s library with five different contacts. Shared photos can be edited or deleted freely by these contacts.
  • The Hidden and Recently Deleted albums are now protected by Face ID or Touch ID, unless the user turns this off in Settings.
  • It is now possible to copy filters and effects from an image to other images.
  • It is possible to search for certain text inside of images.
  • When cropping photos, there is now a Wallpaper format which will crop the photo to the same aspect ratio as the devices display.
  • Automatic duplicate detection automatically detects and groups duplicate photos or videos together. The higher quality version will be kept and the relevant data of the duplicates will be merged into the kept photo.

Camera

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  • While taking photos, there is a button to toggle between whether the photo will be automatically shared to their Shared Photo Library or only be saved to their personal photo library.
  • The Camera app has the live translate feature built into the viewfinder.

Safari

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  • Shared tab groups: Groups of tabs can be shared with others to work on them together and see in real time which tab others are looking at.
  • Pinned tabs: in the opened tabs view, tabs can be pinned to the top.
  • Tab group start pages: each tab group can have a different start page containing Favorites, Frequently Visited, etc.
  • Extension syncing: users can view which extensions are installed on other devices and decide to install them on the current device. After they are installed, they are synced across all devices and are enabled on one device, so that they enable on all of them.
  • Website Settings syncing: website settings such as Page Zoom, Request Desktop website, Use Reader automatically, etc. can be synced across all devices, so just set them on one device that are automatically set to all others.
  • Added support for AVIF image format.[11]

Notes

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  • A quick note can be created directly from the Lock Screen.
  • Quick notes can be created in any app using the share menu.

Contacts

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  • Duplicate contacts are now automatically detected and users can merge them individually.
  • When sharing contacts, individual fields can be selected to only share that information.
  • It is possible to group contacts into separate lists to better organize them and easily send an email to all the members of that list.
  • Ability to export contact lists to file

Calendar

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  • It is now possible to copy and paste events between the various days of the calendar.

Files

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  • New Quick Actions on a file allow the user to convert an image to another format JPEG, PNG, HEIF and resize it to Small, Medium, Large, Original.

Tips

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  • The tips UI has been refreshed.

Books

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  • The toolbar containing the reading settings, search and bookmarks has been replaced by a pop-up panel placed in an icon at the bottom in order to increase the space available for the contents and also to be more accessible when using the phone with one hand.
  • Ability to adjust the line spacing, character spacing, word spacing and activate the full justification for text.
  • A new theme calibrates the page colors automatically based on the ambient light using True Tone.

Health

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  • Users can add and manage the medications they take.
  • Sleep stages allows users to monitor the sleep phases detected by the Apple Watch.

Apple News

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  • New "My Sports" section for highlights, videos and news regarding sports teams. Users can add their favorite sports teams for use with My Sports.
  • Expanded local news.
  • New Favorites group.

Weather

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  • New forecast modules for details about air quality, local forecasts, etc.
  • Hourly forecasts for the next 10 days, with minute-by-minute precipitation intensity over the next hour.
  • More detailed and easier to understand interactive graphs have been added that show exact trends over time of temperature, wind, humidity, etc.
  • Receive government notifications about severe weather events like tornadoes, winter storms, flash floods, etc.

Fitness

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  • The app is now available even if the user doesn't own an Apple Watch.

Home

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  • Introduced a new architecture for Apple Home. This update was originally released in iOS 16.2 and pulled, and reintroduced in iOS 16.4.[12]
  • Added support for the Matter standard for home automation.

Apple TV

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iOS 16 allows cross-device connectivity in tvOS 16 for new experiences between Apple TV, Apple Watch, and iPhone.[citation needed] iOS 16 also removes most AirPlay functionality with the second and third generation Apple TV.[13]

Security and privacy

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Lockdown Mode

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Lockdown Mode is a special mode that, when activated, raises the security to the highest possible level by restricting some features of the operating system, apps and web platform, in order to protect users from the rarest and most sophisticated attacks.[14]

Unlike many other security features, Lockdown Mode is regarded as an “extreme, optional”[14] mode that is not intended to be activated by the majority of users. Rather, it is designed as a defense against advanced malware and mercenary spyware, such as clickless exploits or zero-click attacks, which are often hyper-targeted toward influential individuals such as journalists, diplomats, politicians, activists, lawyers, and high-profile business people.[15][16]

It is possible to disable the Lockdown Mode on specific websites and apps by acting from the Safari’s Website Settings and the Lockdown Mode's Web Browsing setting.

Passkeys

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Passkeys allows the user to authenticate to services that implement WebAuthn across their devices without using passwords. Passkeys are generated by the phone and permission is granted via Face ID or Touch ID.[17]

Safety Check

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Safety Check resets all access permissions given to people, apps, and devices for an iCloud account when activated; this is designed to help those in abusive or divorced relationships.

Rapid Security Response

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Important security updates are now distributed without requiring an entire OS update. Users can optionally remove the security updates, although the standard update will still include the security fixes.[18]

Clipboard security improved

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Applications and websites now require permission to copy from the clipboard.

Private Access Tokens

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Private Access Tokens are a new technology that replaces CAPTCHAs and helps in identifying HTTP requests from legitimate devices and people without compromising their identity or personal information.[19]

Brand Indicators for Message Identification

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Brand Indicators for Message Identification (BIMI) helps users to easily verify authenticated emails sent by brands by displaying the brand's logo alongside the email's header.

Known issues

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Supported devices

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iOS 16 requires iPhones with an A11 Bionic[a] SoC or later, which means it drops support for devices with an A9[b] and A10 Fusion[c] SoC, iOS 16 is the first version of iOS to drop support for iPhone without a 3.5 mm headphone jack, officially marking the end of support for the iPod Touch. iOS 16 is the first version of iOS to drop support for an iPhone SE. However, iPhones with an A11 Bionic SoC have limited support[d] while iPhones with an A12 Bionic SoC or newer[e] have full support.[20]

The cutoff for the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus has been criticized due to the iPad 5th, 6th and 7th generations supporting iPadOS 16 despite having similar or even less powerful hardware.[21]

Release history

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The first developer beta of iOS 16 was released on June 6, 2022. iOS 16 was officially released on September 12, 2022.

iOS 16 releases[22]
Version Build Codename Release date Notes
Unsupported: 16.0 20A362 Sydney September 12, 2022 Security content
Unsupported: 16.0.1 20A371 September 14, 2022 Only available for iPhone 14 models.
Unsupported: 16.0.2 20A380 September 22, 2022
Unsupported: 16.0.3 20A392 October 10, 2022 Security content
Unsupported: 16.1 20B82 SydneyB October 24, 2022 Security content
Unsupported: 16.1.1 20B101 November 9, 2022 Security content
Unsupported: 16.1.2 20B110 November 30, 2022 Security content
Unsupported: 16.2 20C65 SydneyC December 13, 2022 Security content
Unsupported: 16.3 20D47 SydneyD January 23, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.3.1 20D67 February 13, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.4 20E247 SydneyE March 27, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.4.1 20E252 April 7, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.4.1 (a) 20E772520a May 1, 2023
Unsupported: 16.5 20F66 SydneyF May 18, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.5.1 20F75 June 21, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.5.1 (a) 20F770750b July 10, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.5.1 (c) 20F770750d July 12, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.6 20G75 SydneyG July 24, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.6.1 20G81 September 7, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7 20H19 SydneySecurityDawn September 21, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.1 20H30 October 10, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.2 20H115 SydneySecurityDawnB October 25, 2023 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.3 20H232 SydneySecurityDawnC December 11, 2023 Security content. All later updates are only available for devices not supported by iOS 17: iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone X.
Unsupported: 16.7.4 20H240 December 19, 2023
Unsupported: 16.7.5 20H307 SydneySecurityDawnD January 22, 2024 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.6 20H320 SydneySecurityDawnE March 5, 2024 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.7 20H330 March 21, 2024 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.8 20H343 SydneySecurityDawnF May 13, 2024 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.9 20H348 SydneySecurityDawnG July 29, 2024 Security content
Unsupported: 16.7.10 20H350 SydneySecurityDawnH August 7, 2024
Unsupported: 16.7.11 20H360 SydneySecurityDawnI March 31, 2025 Security content
Latest version: 16.7.12 20H364 September 15, 2025 Security content
Legend:
Unsupported
Latest version
Preview version

See Apple's official release notes, and official security update contents.

  1. ^ iPhone 8, 8 Plus, X
  2. ^ iPhone 6s, 6s Plus, and the first-generation SE
  3. ^ iPhone 7, 7 Plus and the final iPod Touch
  4. ^ Using cameras to track medications in the Health app, blurring foreground objects in portrait photos, ending cellular and FaceTime calls through Siri, and the drag-and-drop photo crop are not available on iPhones older than the iPhone XS/XS Max and XR.
  5. ^ iPhone XS, XS Max, XR

See also

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Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
iOS 16 is the sixteenth major release of Apple's iOS mobile operating system for iPhone, announced on June 6, 2022, at the Worldwide Developers Conference and publicly released on September 12, 2022.[1][2] It introduced the most extensive redesign of the Lock Screen to date, enabling users to add customizable widgets, dynamic wallpapers that respond to time and location, and expressive font styles for time and date displays.[1] The update emphasized personalization and productivity, with compatibility extending to iPhone models from the iPhone 8 and later, while dropping support for older devices like the iPhone 7 series due to hardware limitations in handling new features.[3] Key innovations included enhancements to the Messages app, allowing users to edit or unsend recently sent texts within a two-minute window and recover deleted conversations, alongside scheduled sending and improved media sharing via iCloud Shared Photo Library.[1] Live Activities provided real-time updates from apps directly on the Lock Screen or Dynamic Island on supported models, such as sports scores or ride-sharing progress, reducing the need to unlock the device.[1] Focus modes received deeper integration with system-wide controls, while Mail gained features like message unsnoozing and VIP contact prioritization; these changes aimed to streamline communication and reduce distractions through empirical user interaction data from Apple's testing.[1] Despite its advancements, iOS 16 faced user-reported issues including excessive battery drain, Wi-Fi disconnections, and performance lag on initial rollout, which Apple mitigated through point updates like iOS 16.1, though some persisted until later patches.[4][3] The release marked a shift toward greater on-device customization without compromising core security protocols, succeeding iOS 15's privacy-focused emphasis and preceding iOS 17's further AI integrations, solidifying iOS's position in maintaining high user retention through iterative hardware-software synergy.[2]

Development

Announcement at WWDC 2022

Apple unveiled iOS 16 at its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2022 keynote on June 6, 2022, emphasizing personalization and communication enhancements across iPhone devices.[1] The virtual event, streamed online, positioned iOS 16 as delivering the most significant Lock Screen update in iOS history, enabling users to customize with widgets, fonts, colors, and dynamic wallpapers that respond to time or location.[1][5] Key demonstrations included new Messages capabilities, such as editing or unsending messages within two minutes of sending, scheduling deliveries, and collaborative features like shared lists integrated with Apple apps.[1] Mail received updates for unsending emails, scheduling sends, and a redesigned interface to prioritize important messages via transaction detection.[1] The announcement also introduced iCloud Shared Photo Library for selective photo sharing with family, supporting up to six contributors and automatic organization.[1] Further highlights encompassed Live Activities for real-time app updates on the Lock Screen, such as sports scores or ride-sharing progress, and expansions to Live Text supporting more languages and handwritten notes.[1] Apple stated iOS 16 would launch in the fall of 2022, with developer betas available immediately post-keynote and public betas following in July.[5] Compatibility was noted for iPhones from the iPhone 8 onward, excluding older models like the iPhone 7.[6]

Beta testing and developer previews

The first developer beta of iOS 16 was released on June 6, 2022, immediately following its announcement at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC).[7] This initial preview, available exclusively to registered members of the Apple Developer Program, enabled early testing of features such as customizable Lock Screen widgets and enhanced notification controls.[7] Developers could install the beta through the Settings app by selecting the developer update channel under Software Update > Beta Updates, with subsequent versions released roughly every one to two weeks to incorporate fixes and refinements based on reported issues.[8] Apple's beta testing process emphasized iterative feedback, with developers submitting bug reports and suggestions via the integrated Feedback Assistant tool, which logs device data to aid in debugging stability and performance problems inherent in pre-release software.[9] Multiple developer betas followed, including beta 2 on June 22, beta 3 on July 6, and later iterations up to a release candidate in early September, allowing for extensive validation across compatible iPhone models before the general availability version.[10] Apple cautioned participants that betas might contain unresolved bugs, recommending installation on secondary devices to avoid disrupting primary workflows.[8] The public beta program, open to any user via free enrollment at beta.apple.com, began with its first release on July 11, 2022, typically trailing developer betas by two versions to ensure greater stability.[11] This phase broadened testing to non-developers, gathering diverse usage data to refine usability and compatibility, with public betas following a similar bi-weekly cadence and installation process as the developer track.[9] Feedback from both programs contributed to polishing core enhancements, such as Live Activities and improved Focus modes, prior to the stable iOS 16 launch on September 12, 2022.[10]

Compatibility

Supported iPhone models

iOS 16 is compatible with iPhone models equipped with the A11 Bionic chip or later, specifically those released from 2017 onward, excluding the first-generation iPhone SE (2016).[12] This includes the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus, marking the oldest models supported, as well as the iPhone X and all subsequent flagship and mid-range variants up to the iPhone 14 series launched in September 2022.[12] The second-generation iPhone SE (2020) and third-generation iPhone SE (2022) are also supported despite their later release dates.[12] iOS 16 is the final major version of iOS supported on the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, and iPhone X. Apple dropped support for these models with the release of iOS 17 in September 2023 due to hardware requirements, specifically the need for an A12 Bionic chip or later. The full list of supported models is as follows: To upgrade a compatible iPhone (including the second- and third-generation iPhone SE models) to iOS 16, first back up the device. Then, go to Settings > General > Software Update. If iOS 16 or later is available, tap Download and Install, then follow the prompts. If no update appears or the model is incompatible, the device cannot be upgraded to iOS 16.[13] This compatibility ensured broad adoption among users with devices from the past five years at the time of iOS 16's public release on September 12, 2022, while dropping support for older A9- and A10-powered models like the iPhone 6s, iPhone 7 series, and first-generation iPhone SE to enable new features requiring enhanced hardware capabilities.[12][14]

Devices excluded from support

iOS 16 dropped support for several iPhone models that had been compatible with iOS 15, specifically the iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, and first-generation iPhone SE (2016).[12][15] These devices, released between September 2015 and March 2016, were powered by Apple's A9 or A10 Fusion processors, which Apple determined were insufficient for the performance requirements of iOS 16's new features, such as enhanced Stage Manager multitasking and improved on-device machine learning capabilities.[15][14] The exclusion was announced by Apple on June 6, 2022, during its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), where compatibility was limited to iPhone 8 and later models featuring at least the A11 Bionic chip.[15] Owners of the excluded models remained on iOS 15, which continued to receive security updates until at least September 2022, but lost access to iOS 16-exclusive enhancements like customizable Lock Screen widgets and refined Focus modes.[12][14] This marked the end of software support for the iPhone 6s series after seven years, aligning with Apple's typical pattern of providing five to seven years of major iOS updates per device generation.[14] Additionally, iOS 16 discontinued support for the iPod touch (7th generation), the last model in that line, effectively ending iOS updates for non-iPhone hardware with A10 chips.[14] Apple cited hardware constraints as the barrier, though no official rationale beyond compatibility lists was provided, prompting some users to criticize the decision for accelerating device obsolescence amid ongoing security needs for older A9/A10 hardware.[15]

Core system enhancements

Lock screen and home screen updates

iOS 16 introduced a redesigned Lock Screen emphasizing personalization through custom wallpapers, including user photos with a multilayered depth effect that positions subjects in front of the time display, built-in gallery options such as Weather and Astronomy themes, and expressive font styles with color choices for the date and time.[1][3] Users can create multiple Lock Screens and switch between them via horizontal swipes, with each supporting small and large widgets for glanceable information like weather forecasts, calendar events, battery levels, alarms, and fitness metrics, drawing inspiration from Apple Watch complications.[1][3] Notifications on the Lock Screen were updated to roll up from the bottom, preserving visibility of the wallpaper and widgets while integrating with Focus modes to link specific Lock Screens, widgets, and Home Screen pages to contextual filters that reduce distractions.[1] Live Activities provide real-time updates, such as sports scores or ride-sharing progress, directly on the Lock Screen without unlocking the device.[1][3] Further options to hide or minimize notifications on the Lock Screen, such as adjusting preview content and per-app alert settings, are available in Settings > Notifications. See Notification and Focus mode refinements for more information.[16][17] Home Screen updates in iOS 16 focused on enhanced integration with the Lock Screen, enabling independent wallpaper customization for the Home Screen separate from the Lock Screen during setup, and tying specific Home Screen layouts to Focus-linked Lock Screens for mode-specific app arrangements.[1][3] Widgets on the Home Screen remained resizable and stackable as in prior versions, but gained better compatibility with Lock Screen data syncing, such as shared Activity rings or search access via Spotlight from the Home Screen bottom edge.[3] These changes, announced at WWDC on June 6, 2022, and released publicly on September 12, 2022, aimed to make the interface more dynamic and user-controlled without altering core navigation gestures.[1]

Notification and Focus mode refinements

iOS 16 introduced Live Activities, a dynamic notification format that displays real-time updates from apps directly on the Lock Screen and, on supported devices like the iPhone 14 Pro, the Dynamic Island, such as ongoing sports scores, ride-sharing progress, or delivery statuses without requiring full app interaction. Interactions with Live Activities in the Dynamic Island include touching and holding to expand for more details and controls, swiping outward from the center to expand the activity, swiping inward from the sides to collapse the view, swiping left or right along the sides to switch between activities, and single tapping to open the associated app; system activities may limit some gestures, while third-party apps follow similar patterns.[18][19] This refinement addresses limitations in static notifications by enabling compact, glanceable widgets that update in near real-time via Apple's WidgetKit framework.[18] Notifications on the Lock Screen were repositioned to the bottom in a stacked view by default, reducing overlap with customizable Lock Screen elements like widgets and clocks compared to the top-positioned banners in prior versions.[20] Users gained options to adjust the display style via Settings > Notifications, selecting from Stack (collapsed groups), Count (numeric badges), or List (expanded previews) to balance visibility and minimalism.[21] Complementing these display styles, users can further minimize or hide notification content on the Lock Screen by controlling previews, either globally or per app, to enhance privacy. Globally, go to Settings > Notifications > Show Previews and select "When Unlocked" (to show previews only after unlocking) or "Never" (to hide content entirely). Per app, navigate to Settings > Notifications > [app] > Show Previews and choose the same options, which override the global setting. Additionally, notifications from specific apps can be prevented from appearing on the Lock Screen by disabling the "Lock Screen" toggle under the app's alerts settings, or by turning off Allow Notifications entirely.[16][17] Focus modes received integration with the Lock Screen, permitting users to associate specific wallpapers, fonts, and widgets with individual modes, such as a work-themed setup activating automatically during scheduled hours.[1] This linkage streamlines context-switching by syncing visual and functional elements across screens.[22] Custom Home Screen pages could be designated per Focus mode, hiding non-essential apps during activation—for instance, concealing social media icons in a Sleep Focus while prioritizing clock or calendar apps.[23] Focus Filters extended this to app-level behaviors, allowing developers to implement mode-specific customizations, like filtering email inboxes to show only urgent messages in a Work Focus or dimming social feeds in Personal mode.[22] These filters, enabled through APIs in WidgetKit and App Intents, required opt-in by app developers but enhanced granularity without altering core notification silencing.[23] Setup for Focus modes was simplified with automated suggestions based on usage patterns, such as proposing a Driving Focus tied to CarPlay connections, and expanded preset options including Sleep, Personal, and Work, all configurable via the Settings app.[22] Cross-device continuity ensured Focus states propagated via iCloud to paired Apple Watches and Macs, maintaining consistency in notification handling.[3]

Control Center and multitasking

In iOS 16, released on September 12, 2022, Apple redesigned the Control Center to provide greater customization and accessibility. Accessed by swiping down from the top-right corner of the screen, the updated interface allows users to add, remove, and rearrange controls for functions such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, flashlight, and media playback.[24] Controls are organized into modular groups, with the ability to create multiple swipeable pages for separating categories like connectivity, smart home devices, and shortcuts, enabling quicker access without interrupting primary tasks.[24] To customize, users enter edit mode by tapping the plus icon in the top-left corner, where they can drag controls to reorder, resize certain elements like sliders, or add new ones from an extensive list including third-party app integrations via Shortcuts. This modular design contrasts with prior versions' fixed layout, prioritizing user-defined efficiency for frequent actions like toggling Low Power Mode or adjusting screen brightness during app use.[24] Multitasking on iPhone with iOS 16 relies on the established App Switcher, invoked by swiping up from the bottom edge and pausing to display card-like previews of recently used apps. Users can swipe horizontally to navigate apps, tap to resume, or swipe up on a card to close it, with background processes continuing via Apple's managed multitasking model that balances performance and battery life.[25] No fundamental changes to split-screen or windowed multitasking were introduced for iPhone, maintaining the single-app foreground focus inherent to iOS design, though Picture-in-Picture video playback—available since iOS 14—persists for supported media apps, allowing overlaid viewing while interacting with other interfaces.[26] The enhanced Control Center indirectly supports task switching by offering rapid toggles without app navigation, such as activating Focus modes to filter notifications across sessions.[24]

Siri, Spotlight, and search improvements

iOS 16 introduced enhancements to Siri, enabling it to perform certain actions without requiring user confirmation, such as ending phone calls or sending messages.[27] Siri also gained limited offline processing capabilities for basic requests, reducing reliance on internet connectivity for simple tasks like setting timers or alarms.[27] Additionally, dictation was overhauled to allow seamless switching between voice input and keyboard typing, with support for inserting emojis and punctuation via voice commands.[28] Spotlight search received updates for quicker access and expanded functionality, including a dedicated Search button at the bottom of the Home Screen for direct entry into the interface.[29] A key addition was Quick Actions, allowing users to execute tasks directly from search results, such as starting a timer, activating a Focus mode, identifying songs via Shazam, or running custom Shortcuts.[30][29] Searching for an app name displays relevant shortcuts associated with it, streamlining workflows without opening the app.[31] General search refinements in iOS 16 emphasized predictive suggestions based on user habits and real-time result updates as queries are typed, improving efficiency across apps and content.[30] Users could customize search scope via Settings > Siri & Search, toggling app content inclusion and Apple suggestions to balance privacy and utility.[31] These changes aimed to make information retrieval more intuitive, though some users reported initial performance issues like delayed app indexing post-update, often resolvable by adjusting search settings.[32]

Accessibility and input features

iOS 16 introduced Live Captions, an on-device feature that generates real-time text transcripts for spoken audio and sounds in videos, podcasts, phone calls, and other media played on the iPhone, supporting English in regions like the US, UK, Australia, and Canada.[33] This capability processes audio locally to maintain user privacy without requiring internet connectivity or cloud services.[34] Live Captions appear in a persistent overlay and can be enabled via Settings > Accessibility > Live Captions, with options to adjust text size and appearance.[35] The Magnifier app, which leverages the iPhone's camera as a digital magnifying glass, gained new detection capabilities in iOS 16, including Point and Speak for audio readout of text labels on objects such as door buttons or appliance controls, and Detection Mode for identifying and describing people, animals, text, signs, and doors via visual recognition and spoken feedback. Door Detection specifically highlights door locations and details like handles or numbers to assist navigation for visually impaired users.[36] These updates build on the app's core zoom and filter functions, accessible from Control Center or the app itself.[37] Spoken Content enhancements included eight new high-quality, more expressive voices for screen reading and text-to-speech, available in languages such as English (various accents), Mandarin, French, and others, selectable in Settings > Accessibility > Spoken Content > Voices.[38] These voices offer improved intonation and naturalness compared to prior options, aiding users relying on VoiceOver or Speak Screen.[38] For motor and input accessibility, AssistiveTouch supported custom gestures, allowing users to map multi-finger actions—like double-pinch or triple-tap—to commands such as taking photos or returning to the home screen, configurable in Settings > Accessibility > Touch > AssistiveTouch.[39] Apple Watch Mirroring enabled direct control of paired Apple Watches from the iPhone, benefiting users with limited upper-body mobility by mirroring the Watch interface on the larger iPhone screen for gesture-based input. Keyboard input refinements included toggleable haptic feedback for tactile confirmation during typing, set in Settings > Sounds & Haptics, enhancing precision for users with motor challenges.[40]

Built-in application updates

Messages and communication apps

In iOS 16, the Messages app introduced several enhancements primarily for iMessage communications between Apple devices, enabling users to edit sent messages up to five times within a 15-minute window, undo sending within two minutes to retract a message before delivery, and mark messages as unread to retain notification badges for later review.[1] These features address common user errors in digital communication but apply only to iMessage blue bubbles, not SMS/MMS green bubbles, due to Apple's ecosystem limitations and end-to-end encryption protocols.[41] A new Check In feature allows users to automatically notify selected contacts upon safely arriving at a destination, such as after walking home at night, by leveraging location services and automating status updates to enhance personal safety without manual intervention.[1] This opt-in functionality integrates with Focus modes and requires explicit sharing permissions, reflecting Apple's emphasis on privacy-controlled data sharing amid rising concerns over location tracking vulnerabilities.[41] Messages also gained support for SharePlay, extending synchronized media playback—initially introduced in iOS 15 for FaceTime—to group chats, permitting real-time sharing of movies, music, or TV shows with playback controls visible to all participants via Apple TV app or Apple Music integration.[1] Additionally, users can apply inline text formatting options like bold, italic, underline, and strikethrough, alongside animated effects such as bubble expansions or slams, to enrich expressive messaging without altering core transmission reliability.[41] For deleted messages, iOS 16 provides a 30-day recovery window from a "Recently Deleted" folder, aiding accidental removals while maintaining data retention limits to balance storage and security.[41] These updates, announced at WWDC on June 6, 2022, and rolled out in the iOS 16 stable release on September 12, 2022, prioritize usability within Apple's closed ecosystem, though interoperability with non-Apple platforms remains unchanged, underscoring platform-specific innovation over universal standards.[1] FaceTime saw minor refinements in iOS 16, including improved integration with SharePlay for broader media syncing, but no major overhauls; core capabilities like spatial audio and grid view, established in prior versions, persisted without significant alterations reported in official documentation.[1] The Phone app retained standard call handling, with iOS 16 focusing instead on system-wide communication enablers like enhanced Siri transcription for voicemails, though full Live Voicemail transcription debuted later in iOS 17 updates.[42]

Media and productivity apps

iOS 16 introduced iCloud Shared Photo Library, enabling users to share a dedicated collection of photos and videos with up to five others via iCloud, with automatic addition based on faces, locations, or albums, while maintaining original libraries intact.[1] The Photos app added the ability to copy and paste edits from one image or video to another, including adjustments to exposure, filters, or crops, streamlining batch editing workflows.[43] Users gained granular undo and redo controls for individual edits, rather than reverting entire sessions, and a new "Lift Subject from Background" tool to isolate and copy subjects for pasting into other images or apps.[44] Additionally, a dedicated Duplicates album automatically detects and suggests merging similar photos, and the Hidden album became locked by default with Face ID, Touch ID, or passcode, enhancing privacy for sensitive content.[44] The Mail app received enhancements for composition and management, including a 10-second window to unsend emails after tapping send, recoverable via the original outbox.[45] Scheduling emails for later delivery became possible, with options to set specific dates and times directly in the compose sheet.[46] "Remind Me Later" flags unread messages for notifications at a chosen time or when replying to another email, while "Follow Up" marks recipients or attachments as pending for proactive reminders.[47] Search improvements included automatic corrections for typos and contextual suggestions, such as filtering by sender or attachment type, reducing retrieval errors.[45] Notes expanded Quick Notes functionality to iPhone, allowing capture from any app or Lock Screen with automatic addition of contextual links to the originating content or location.[48] Individual notes or folders could be locked using a custom password, device passcode, Face ID, or Touch ID, with biometric access requiring explicit unlocking per session for security.[49] Collaboration features permitted real-time editing and sharing via iCloud links, with participant management and activity tracking. Reminders introduced list templates for recurring tasks, such as grocery or travel checklists, savable and reusable with customizable sections and subtasks.[50] Users could pin frequently accessed lists to the top of the app for quick navigation, and a dedicated "Completed" smart list aggregated finished items across all lists with filters for flagged or assigned tasks.[51] Notes within reminders supported rich formatting, including bold, underline, strikethrough, and bullet points, enhancing detail capture without external apps.[50] Shared lists displayed notifications for additions or completions by others, improving group coordination.[52] iOS 16 introduced Safari 16, which included passkeys as a passwordless authentication method leveraging public-key cryptography and biometric verification via Face ID or Touch ID for supported websites.[53][54] Passkeys are stored in iCloud Keychain and synced across Apple devices, enabling seamless sign-ins without passwords while resisting phishing attacks due to device-bound private keys.[55] Safari gained shared Tab Groups, allowing users to organize tabs into named groups and share them with up to 100 participants for real-time collaboration, where additions or removals by any member update instantly across devices.[56] This feature extends the Tab Groups functionality from prior versions, with shared groups appearing in the sidebar alongside private ones and supporting iCloud synchronization.[57] Web push notifications became supported in Safari on iOS 16, enabling websites to deliver notifications via the Push API and Notifications API standards, integrated with Apple's Push Notification service for delivery even when Safari is closed.[58][59] Users grant permission per site, and notifications respect Focus modes, with developers required to implement service workers for handling.[60] Safari extensions saw improvements, including cross-device syncing via iCloud and badges indicating activity like unread counts, alongside developer tools such as Web Inspector Extensions for debugging.[57] Privacy protections advanced with enhanced Intelligent Tracking Prevention, blocking cross-site trackers and limiting IP address exposure to known trackers on non-Private Browsing sessions.[60] Users could add websites as full-screen web apps to the Home Screen, which launch in standalone mode without browser UI.[57]

Health, fitness, and utility apps

In iOS 16, released on September 12, 2022, the Health app introduced a dedicated Medicines feature allowing users to log prescription and over-the-counter medications, set dosage reminders, and receive notifications for potential drug interactions based on logged data.[61] This functionality draws from user-input details and cross-references with known pharmacological data to flag risks such as reduced effectiveness or adverse effects when combining certain drugs.[62] Additionally, the app's Sleep category expanded to display sleep stages—light, core, deep, and REM—derived from Apple Watch data for compatible models running watchOS 9, providing granular insights into nightly rest patterns without requiring manual entry.[61] The Fitness app, previously restricted to Apple Watch owners, became accessible to all iPhone users in iOS 16, leveraging the device's built-in motion sensors to track metrics like walking pace, distance, flights climbed, and activity rings for Move, Exercise, and Stand goals.[63] It integrates data from third-party sources, such as Garmin devices, to populate trends, awards, and summaries, enabling non-Watch users to monitor progress and receive motivational badges for achievements like closing rings over consecutive days.[64] Apple Fitness+ content, including guided workouts, also extended to iPhone playback, broadening access to subscription-based video sessions synced with on-screen metrics.[65] Among utility apps, the Wallet app in iOS 16 added support for order tracking, where users could view real-time updates for purchases like event tickets, boarding passes, and deliveries directly from participating merchants, with automatic addition via email or Messages links.[66] Digital car keys gained easier sharing options through apps like Mail and Messages, allowing temporary access permissions with expiration timers for recipients.[67] These enhancements aimed to consolidate transactional and access-related data into a single interface, though Apple Pay Later financing was announced but deferred to a subsequent iOS 16 update in spring 2023.[66]

Security and privacy measures

Lockdown Mode and Safety Check

Lockdown Mode is an optional, extreme-level security feature introduced in iOS 16 on September 12, 2022, designed to safeguard high-risk users—such as journalists, activists, or dissidents—from rare, sophisticated mercenary spyware attacks like those employing zero-click exploits.[68][69] It achieves this by imposing stringent restrictions on device functionality, including disabling most incoming message attachments (except from trusted contacts), blocking link previews in Messages, preventing the installation of configuration profiles, and restricting web technologies such as just-in-time (JIT) JavaScript compilation, complex HTML/CSS parsing, and certain font formats to mitigate drive-by downloads.[68][69] Additional measures encompass safer defaults for wireless connectivity (e.g., disabling 5G and ultra-wideband unless explicitly allowed), limiting FaceTime to known contacts, and blocking wired connections via USB-C or Lightning when the device is locked.[70] These changes prioritize defense against targeted surveillance over usability, with Apple recommending it only for those facing verified threats, as it intentionally degrades features like media sharing and some app behaviors.[68] Enabling Lockdown Mode requires navigating to Settings > Privacy & Security > Lockdown Mode, confirming the action, and restarting the device; it applies across linked Apple devices but can be toggled per-device.[68] Safety Check, debuting alongside Lockdown Mode in iOS 16, serves as a streamlined tool for users—particularly those escaping abusive relationships or managing unwanted access—to audit and revoke data-sharing permissions granted to individuals, apps, or devices.[71][72] Accessed via Settings > Privacy & Security > Safety Check, it consolidates reviews of shared location via Find My, Family Sharing memberships, Apple ID sign-ins on other devices, and app-specific permissions, enabling quick revocation without navigating disparate menus.[72] For urgent scenarios, an "Emergency Reset" option immediately halts all location sharing, signs out of iCloud on unfamiliar devices, removes non-essential app access, and notifies the user of changes, while a "Quick Exit" button minimizes the interface to evade detection by abusers monitoring the screen.[71] This feature addresses real-world risks like coerced access in intimate partner violence cases, where victims might have previously shared sensitive data under duress, by emphasizing speed and comprehensiveness over granular control during crises.[73] Apple positions Safety Check as part of broader personal safety enhancements, integrated with Emergency SOS for holistic protection, though it requires iOS 16 or later and user-initiated review for effectiveness.[72]

Passkeys and authentication changes

iOS 16 introduced passkeys as a passwordless authentication method, enabling users to sign in to websites and apps using biometric identifiers like Face ID or Touch ID, or a device passcode, instead of traditional passwords.[74] Passkeys leverage public-key cryptography based on the WebAuthn standard developed by the FIDO Alliance, where a unique public key is registered with the service and the corresponding private key remains securely stored on the user's device or in iCloud Keychain.[75] Announced at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 6, 2022, and available upon the iOS 16 release on September 12, 2022, passkeys sync across Apple devices via end-to-end encrypted iCloud Keychain, allowing seamless authentication without transmitting credentials over networks.[76] Unlike passwords, passkeys are resistant to phishing attacks because they are cryptographically bound to specific domains and cannot be extracted or reused remotely; authentication occurs locally on the device, verifying the site's legitimacy before releasing the credential.[74] Apple claims passkeys provide superior security by eliminating risks associated with password reuse, weak choices, or breaches, as the private keys never leave the secure enclave of the device and are protected by hardware-backed operations.[77] They also simplify user experience by autofilling during sign-in prompts in Safari or supported apps, with options to create passkeys for new accounts or convert existing passwords.[55] Authentication changes extended to cross-platform compatibility, where iOS 16 users can authenticate on non-Apple platforms via QR code scanning or third-party password managers, aligning with industry efforts by Google and Microsoft to standardize passwordless sign-ins.[78] However, adoption depends on service provider implementation of WebAuthn APIs, limiting immediate universality; early supporters included eBay and Kayak, but many sites retained password fallbacks.[75] Security enhancements include recovery options through trusted devices or contacts, reducing single points of failure while maintaining cryptographic integrity, though critics note potential vulnerabilities if iCloud access is compromised despite Apple's safeguards.[79]

Rapid Security Responses

Rapid Security Responses represent a mechanism introduced by Apple in iOS 16 to enable the deployment of targeted security patches independently of full-point software updates, allowing for faster remediation of critical vulnerabilities. These updates focus exclusively on security fixes, such as addressing actively exploited flaws, and are designed to minimize user disruption by requiring only a small download and device restart rather than a comprehensive OS reinstallation.[80] The feature supports iOS versions compatible with the latest release at the time of deployment, ensuring that devices running supported builds can receive protections without version fragmentation.[81] The capability was enabled starting with iOS 16, though the inaugural deployment occurred on May 1, 2023, as iOS 16.4.1(a), which patched a specific zero-day vulnerability in the Kernel framework (CVE-2023-28206) and WebKit (CVE-2023-28205) that could enable arbitrary code execution.[82] Subsequent responses for iOS 16 included iOS 16.5.1(c) on July 12, 2023, targeting similar high-severity issues like sandbox escape vulnerabilities.[83] Apple classifies these as the highest-priority updates, often responding to real-world exploits, thereby reducing the window of exposure for users compared to traditional update cycles that might take weeks or months.[84] In operation, Rapid Security Responses are delivered via Apple's standard update channels but install as lightweight components—typically under 10 MB—that integrate directly into the existing system without altering the base version number.[85] Users are prompted to approve installation, after which the device reboots briefly to apply changes; subsequent responses may install more seamlessly if automatic updates are enabled.[86] This approach contrasts with full updates by avoiding extensive testing for non-security features, prioritizing speed to counter threats like nation-state attacks or malware campaigns.[87] While effective for urgent patches, the system relies on users maintaining devices on recent iOS 16 builds, as older versions remain ineligible.

Data protection enhancements

iOS 16 introduced Advanced Data Protection for iCloud, an optional setting that expands end-to-end encryption to additional data categories including iCloud Backup, Notes, Photos, Reminders, Safari Bookmarks, Siri Shortcuts, and Wallet, thereby ensuring Apple cannot access this data even under legal requests.[88] Previously, these categories relied on Apple's encryption keys; with Advanced Data Protection enabled, users hold the keys via device passcodes and recovery methods like iCloud Security Keys or recovery contacts, reducing risks from server-side vulnerabilities or compelled disclosures.[89] This feature became available starting with iOS 16.1 on December 7, 2022, and requires compatible devices with the latest software, emphasizing user-controlled recovery to mitigate total data loss from forgotten credentials.[88] The Notes app in iOS 16 added the ability to lock individual notes using Face ID, Touch ID, or a device passcode, preventing unauthorized access to sensitive content even if the device is unlocked.[90] Locked notes are stored encrypted on-device and in iCloud (when Advanced Data Protection is active), with contents hidden from previews and search until authenticated.[90] Access to the Hidden photo album and Recently Deleted folder was enhanced to require biometric authentication or passcode, up from previous versions where these could be viewed without additional verification on an unlocked device.[91] This change protects potentially sensitive media from casual exposure, such as when handing the device to others, while maintaining recovery options for deleted items within 30 days.[92] iOS 16 implemented a permission prompt for pasting content copied from another Apple device via Continuity features, alerting users to potential cross-device data leaks and allowing denial of the paste action.[92] This addresses risks from clipboard hijacking or unintended sharing of private information, such as credentials or addresses, between linked devices.[93]

Performance and reliability

Battery optimization and efficiency

iOS 16 incorporates safeguards to protect battery longevity during charging, including a "Charging On Hold" alert that pauses the process if the device detects excessive heat, thereby mitigating accelerated chemical degradation in lithium-ion cells caused by high temperatures.[94] This feature activates automatically when environmental or internal conditions exceed safe thresholds, resuming once temperatures normalize.[94] The operating system retains and refines Optimized Battery Charging, introduced in prior versions, which uses machine learning to delay charging beyond 80% until shortly before the user's typical unplug time, reducing time spent at full capacity and slowing capacity fade over cycles.[95] Users can view detailed battery health metrics, including maximum capacity and cycle count, via Settings > Battery > Battery Health & Charging, with iOS 16 enabling recalibration for accurate reporting on supported models.[96] Low Power Mode remains a core efficiency tool, dynamically throttling CPU and GPU performance, disabling background app refresh, and reducing display refresh rates to extend runtime during low charge states; in iOS 16, it integrates with Focus modes for scheduled or contextual activation, such as during sleep hours or specific locations, to preemptively conserve power without manual intervention.[97] This automation leverages on-device pattern recognition to balance usability and efficiency. iOS 16 displays battery percentage directly in the status bar by default on Face ID-equipped iPhones, facilitating real-time monitoring and proactive adjustments like enabling Low Power Mode at user-defined thresholds.[98] Upon initial release on September 12, 2022, some users reported excessive drain attributed to indexing new features like customizable Lock Screens and enhanced Stage Manager multitasking, but point updates such as iOS 16.0.3 (October 24, 2022) resolved underlying bugs, yielding battery endurance comparable to iOS 15 on identical hardware in standardized tests.[99][100]

Hardware-specific optimizations

iOS 16 incorporated optimizations tailored to the display hardware of the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max, enabling the Always-On display functionality. This feature maintains a persistently visible lock screen at reduced brightness and a 1 Hz refresh rate when the device is idle and locked, leveraging the LTPO OLED panels' capability for variable refresh rates. Such adaptation minimizes power draw by avoiding full-screen refreshes, while preserving visibility of widgets, time, date, and notifications; users can opt to suppress wallpaper or alerts in this mode for additional efficiency.[3] The same models benefit from Dynamic Island optimizations, where iOS 16 dynamically expands the pill-shaped cutout housing the front camera and sensors to interact with system and app activities, such as Live Activities for timers, music controls, or navigation prompts. This hardware-specific implementation ensures fluid animations and contextual responsiveness without obstructing content, distinct from the static notch handling on prior devices.[101] For iPhones equipped with ProMotion displays, including the iPhone 13 Pro series and iPhone 14 Pro models, iOS 16 employs adaptive refresh rate scaling from 120 Hz during motion-intensive tasks like scrolling to lower rates for static content, optimizing GPU utilization and reducing thermal output on A15 Bionic and A16 Bionic chips. These adjustments build on prior iOS versions but align with iOS 16's enhanced Lock Screen and widget rendering for sustained high-frame-rate performance without excessive battery depletion.[102]

Reported performance regressions

Upon the release of iOS 16 on September 12, 2022, numerous users reported elevated battery consumption compared to iOS 15, particularly on iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro models, with some experiencing only 4.5 to 5 hours of screen-on time under typical usage.[103] These complaints surfaced on platforms including MacRumors forums and Reddit, where users attributed drain to background processes or features like haptic keyboard feedback, which disabling temporarily mitigated for some.[103] Apple addressed this in point releases, with iOS 16.0.2 on September 23, 2022, and iOS 16.0.3 on October 10, 2022, incorporating optimizations that reduced excessive drain for affected devices.[103] Spotlight search functionality exhibited delays of up to 10 seconds or outright failures in loading results immediately after upgrading to iOS 16, as documented in user threads on Reddit and MacRumors forums.[103] Restarting devices or resetting all settings resolved the issue for many, suggesting it stemmed from incomplete indexing or cache buildup during the initial post-update period rather than a fundamental regression.[103] No widespread benchmarks indicated broader search performance degradation, and the problem diminished with subsequent usage or minor interventions. Animation stutters and lag, notably during swipe-up gestures to return to the home screen or app switching, were prevalent on iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max models running early iOS 16 builds, with users describing choppy frame rates and inconsistent fluidity.[104] These issues persisted across restarts and were reported in MacRumors forums as early as September 2022, potentially linked to Always-On Display interactions or gesture recognition optimizations. Apple mitigated them via software refinements in iOS 16.2, released November 2022, which users confirmed smoothed scrolling, exiting animations, and overall system responsiveness on ProMotion-equipped devices.[105] Independent benchmarks, such as Geekbench scores, showed no aggregate CPU or GPU regressions relative to iOS 15 on compatible hardware, indicating these were isolated software artifacts rather than hardware-induced slowdowns.[106]

Known issues and criticisms

Launch bugs and glitches

Users reported excessive battery drain shortly after iOS 16's release on September 12, 2022, attributing it to background processes and new features like the updated Lock Screen.[107][108] Device overheating was another prevalent issue, often linked to intensive animations and widget rendering on older hardware such as iPhone 8.[107] The AssistiveTouch feature malfunctioned, preventing users from repositioning the floating button on the screen, which affected accessibility-dependent individuals.[107][108] Notification handling glitched, with alerts failing to open corresponding apps or displaying intermittently, particularly on gesture-based interactions.[109][108] On iPhone 14 Pro models, a hardware-software interaction caused the rear camera to shake uncontrollably during video recording, impacting a subset of devices; Apple issued iOS 16.0.1 on September 23, 2022, as a targeted fix for this and related photo library corruption.[110][111] Additional glitches included banking applications crashing upon launch, delays in screen locking, and failures to update third-party apps via the App Store, exacerbating user frustration in the initial week post-launch.[108][111] These issues, while widespread in user forums, were mitigated in follow-up updates like iOS 16.1, though some persisted on non-Pro models.[112]

User-reported problems

Upon release of iOS 16 on September 12, 2022, numerous users reported excessive battery drain, with devices consuming power at rates up to 20-30% faster than on iOS 15, particularly during idle periods or background app refresh.[113] This issue affected a range of iPhone models, including the iPhone 13 series, and was attributed by some to increased CPU usage from new features like customizable Lock Screens and enhanced widgets, though Apple did not officially confirm a root cause.[113] Subsequent point updates like iOS 16.0.2 partially mitigated it for some, but complaints persisted into early 2023.[114] Connectivity problems emerged prominently in iOS 16.1, released October 24, 2022, where Wi-Fi networks would randomly disconnect, especially when devices were in standby mode overnight, leading to failed reconnections without manual intervention.[115] Apple acknowledged the bug indirectly by preparing iOS 16.1.1 to address it, affecting users across iPhone XS and later models.[115] Bluetooth pairing instabilities were also noted sporadically, though less widespread than Wi-Fi issues, often resolved via network resets but recurring post-reboot.[4] Interface and functionality glitches included Spotlight Search failing to respond or returning incomplete results, sometimes requiring device restarts, and the on-screen keyboard occasionally not appearing in third-party apps like Messages or Safari.[114] These persisted for months, with users on older hardware like iPhone 8 reporting exacerbated lag.[114] Activation failures during initial setup for new or transferred devices over Wi-Fi were confirmed by Apple, stemming from server-side authentication errors resolvable only via cellular or later patches.[116] Overall, while many bugs were patched in minor updates through iOS 16.7 in 2023, a subset of users continued experiencing intermittent crashes and performance hiccups, highlighting incomplete optimization for diverse hardware configurations.[114]

Criticisms of feature implementation

The redesigned Photos application in iOS 16 received substantial backlash for its fragmented interface, which consolidated media into a single "Library" view while obscuring traditional albums and collections, complicating navigation for users accustomed to prior layouts. Critics and users reported that the unified grid buried specific photos and videos deeper in the app, requiring additional taps to access organized folders, which undermined efficient browsing and search functionality.[117] Lock screen customization, a flagship addition allowing widgets, fonts, and depth effects, was faulted for its intrusive activation mechanism, where long-pressing the screen inadvertently triggered editing mode during routine use, such as glancing at notifications. The default clock font was described as overly bold and sans-serif, clashing with the minimalist aesthetic and reducing readability in various lighting conditions. Widget implementation was limited to small, complication-style elements, often providing redundant or low-value information compared to home screen alternatives, exacerbating accidental interactions without sufficient safeguards.[118][119] The iMessage "Edit" and "Undo Send" features, permitting up to five edits within 15 minutes or full retraction of sent messages, drew criticism for enabling potential evidence tampering in legal and forensic contexts, as edited messages retain server-side logs but alter recipient views without clear indicators. Domestic violence advocates highlighted risks of abusers unsending incriminating texts to conceal communications, complicating victim documentation and law enforcement investigations. The features' restriction to iMessage—excluding SMS/MMS interoperability—further limited utility while amplifying concerns over inconsistent behavior across messaging ecosystems.[120][121][122]

iOS 16.7.13 update withdrawal

In January 2026, Apple stopped signing iOS 16.7.13 after reports of severe network connectivity issues on the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, and iPhone X following installation. Affected devices were unable to connect to cellular networks, make or receive calls (including emergency calls), or send/receive SMS messages. The update was intended primarily to replace an expiring security certificate required for services such as iMessage and FaceTime, along with other minor bug fixes, but was temporarily withdrawn while Apple investigated the problem. Users with compatible devices should await a corrected version from Apple before attempting to install. For general update issues unrelated to signing (such as insufficient storage space or poor internet connection), users should follow troubleshooting steps on Apple's support website.[123][124][125]

Reception and impact

Critical and analyst reviews

Critics and analysts praised iOS 16 for its emphasis on customization and quality-of-life improvements rather than radical overhauls, with the redesigned lock screen emerging as the most celebrated addition. Reviewers noted that the update allowed users to personalize the lock screen with widgets, fonts, colors, and dynamic wallpapers, transforming it from a static display into a functional hub for quick information access.[126][127][128] The Verge described it as "the true star of iOS 16," crediting Apple for reconceiving its purpose to integrate notifications and widgets seamlessly.[126] Additional features like editable and unsendable messages (within a 15-minute editing window or 2-minute unsend limit) and enhanced Live Text capabilities, including video support and Visual Look Up for object identification, were highlighted for enhancing everyday usability.[129][130] PCMag awarded iOS 16 a 4.5 out of 5 rating, calling it a "superb enhancement" with "impressive, highly customizable Lock Screen" options and convenient tools like Visual Look Up.[129] Tom's Guide similarly rated it highly as Apple's "best iPhone software update in years," appreciating tweaks to Messages, Maps (with multi-stop routing), and the addition of medication tracking in the Health app.[130] Some reviewers pointed out limitations, such as certain lock screen effects requiring compatible photos and Messages features functioning only within Apple's ecosystem if recipients use iMessage.[129] Ars Technica emphasized the update's focus on unlocking customization but noted it lacked broader systemic changes compared to prior versions.[127] Engadget acknowledged the lock screen's utility while observing that deeper AI integrations and third-party app support remained incremental rather than transformative.[128] Overall, the consensus positioned iOS 16 as a refined, user-centric evolution suitable for update on compatible devices, though not a must-upgrade for those content with iOS 15's core functionality.[131]

User adoption and feedback

iOS 16 achieved rapid adoption following its public release on September 12, 2022. Analytics from Mixpanel indicated that approximately 22% of iPhones updated within the first week, with adoption climbing to 69% three months later.[132][133] Apple's data reported 72% of all active iPhones and 81% of devices introduced in the prior four years running iOS 16 by February 2023.[134] By June 2023, this expanded to 81% across all active iPhones, surpassing the pace of subsequent versions like iOS 17.[135][136] The broad compatibility with iPhone 8 and newer models contributed to this uptake, enabling access to features on a significant portion of the installed base.[137] User feedback highlighted appreciation for iOS 16's customization enhancements, particularly the revamped lock screen with widgets and depth effects, which increased personalization without compromising usability.[126] Many users praised the improved Focus mode refinements and Live Activities for providing real-time glanceable information, such as sports scores or ride-sharing updates, fostering a sense of utility in daily interactions.[126] Surveys and analytics firms noted that these non-intrusive updates drove upgrades, with adoption metrics reflecting sustained user satisfaction over invasive changes seen in prior releases.[134] Initial reports included some dissatisfaction with battery efficiency and minor glitches on older hardware, though these diminished with updates like iOS 16.1, which optimized performance and addressed early complaints.[138] Overall, the version's stability post-patches led to prolonged usage, with 20% of recent iPhones still on iOS 16 as late as early 2024, indicating reliable long-term appeal amid slower shifts to iOS 17.[139]

Long-term legacy and updates

iOS 16, released on September 12, 2022, underwent a series of point releases extending into 2026, primarily delivering security patches, bug resolutions, and minor feature refinements for devices ineligible for iOS 17, such as the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, and certain iPad models. Notable updates included iOS 16.1 on October 24, 2022, which added Apple ID sign-in capabilities for iCloud; iOS 16.7 in September 2023, enhancing stability; and later iterations like iOS 16.7.11 on March 31, 2025, addressing vulnerabilities in components such as Accessibility and WebKit. By September 2025, iOS 16.7.12 provided fixes for additional exploits, including one in the Image I/O framework, ensuring protection against zero-day threats for legacy hardware. On January 26, 2026, Apple released iOS 16.7.13 primarily to replace an expiring security certificate, but temporarily withdrew it by stopping the signing process due to network connectivity issues, including impaired emergency call functionality, on iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, and iPhone X models, particularly affecting certain carriers such as Telstra in Australia.[140][123] These prolonged updates aligned with Apple's practice of supplying security support for roughly seven years post-device launch, enabling iPhone 8 series users—introduced in 2017—to maintain secure operation without hardware upgrades.[141] The final security releases in 2025 marked the effective end of active maintenance for iOS 16 on non-upgradable devices, after which users faced risks from unpatched vulnerabilities if remaining on the OS, although an attempted update in early 2026 was withdrawn due to implementation problems.[142] The enduring legacy of iOS 16 centers on bridging usability gaps for aging iPhones by introducing customizable Lock Screens, widget expansions, and Live Activities—elements that persisted and evolved in iOS 17 and beyond, standardizing dynamic home interfaces across Apple's ecosystem. This approach mitigated hardware obsolescence criticisms by extending feature parity to 2017-era models, though it highlighted tensions between innovation cycles and device longevity, as compatibility drops accelerated upgrade pressures. Third-party developers maintained app compatibility with iOS 16 into 2025, supporting enterprise and personal use on unsupported hardware, but declining performance on older chips underscored limits of software-only extensions.[143][144]

References

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