Apple Just Expanded This Privacy Feature to More iPhones

Apple Just Expanded This Privacy Feature to More iPhones

Apple Just Expanded This Privacy Feature to More iPhones

https://lifehacker.com/tech/apple-expanded-privacy-feature-more-iphones

Publish Date: 2026-05-15 12:05:00

Source Domain: lifehacker.com

When you share your location data with an app or service, you may assume you’re sharing your exact coordinates. But that’s not necessarily the case. While “precise location” sharing does indeed broadcast your literal whereabouts, “approximate location” sharing only submits your general position. It’s the difference between an app knowing your home address versus seeing the neighborhood you’re in, or perhaps even the town or city itself. It’s a great way to balance privacy and utility: Apps that don’t need all that extra location information to function simply won’t get it.

Back in January, Apple introduced a new privacy setting for iPhone: Limit Precise Location. While that might sound like the existing option detailed above, this new setting lets you hide this location information from your cell carriers, too. That way, you can totally control how you share your location data from your iPhone: Apps that need precise coordinates, like your navigation app, can have it, while apps that may only need your approximate location can have that instead—including, now, your carrier.

Unfortunately, at the time of launch, support for Limit Precise Location was extremely limited. Apple only opened this option to iPhones that have its proprietary C1 or C1X chip, including the iPhone Air, iPhone 16e, and the cellular model of the M5 iPad Pro. What’s more, only Boost Mobile users had access in the U.S., meaning a very small fraction of iPhone users in the States have been able to take advantage of this new privacy measure.

Apple expanded Limit Precise Location support with iOS 26.5

That changed with iOS 26.5, which Apple released this week. While the feature still only works for Boost Mobile customers in the U.S., Apple added the iPhone 17e to the list of supported devices. If you don’t live in the U.S., however, the expansion is a little more generous. Apple is including another handful of carriers here, expanding the list to the following:



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