Ful article text below the link:

 


https://9to5mac.com/2025/11/19/ios-26-2-wifi-sharing-apple-watch-iphone-eu/


iOS 26.2 restricts Wi-Fi sharing between iPhone and Apple Watch in the EU, 
here’s why


​

​

 <https://9to5mac.com/author/chmiller44/> Chance Miller



With iOS 26.2 and watchOS 26.2, Apple is removing a key Wi-Fi sharing feature 
from iPhone and Apple Watch in the European Union due to interoperability 
requirements under the Digital Markets Act.

This news was first reported last month by  
<https://www.numerama.com/tech/2110247-lapple-watch-et-liphone-vont-perdre-une-fonction-en-europe-pour-la-premiere-fois-annonce-apple.html>
 French publication Numerama. The report explained that starting with iOS 26.2 
and watchOS 26.2, iPhone won’t be able to sync Wi-Fi history to a newly-paired 
Apple Watch like it can now.

Here are more details on how exactly this will work and why Apple is making the 
change. 


How it works today


Typically, when a user sets up a new Apple Watch, their Wi-Fi network history 
is automatically shared from their iPhone. This means the user doesn’t have to 
manually connect to new Wi-Fi networks and enter passwords directly on their 
Apple Watch. Everything is seamlessly handled in the background.

Apple says that Wi-Fi sharing between iPhone and Apple Watch is designed to be 
private. Apple doesn’t have access to Wi-Fi names or passwords. Everything is 
handled completely privately between a user’s respective devices.

This is key because there’s a lot of information that can be gleaned from 
knowing which Wi-Fi networks a person has connected to. That information can be 
used to easily create a profile on users tracking their interests, where 
they’ve visited, and more.

This is how things will continue to work everywhere except the European Union.


What’s changing in the EU


In the EU, however, things are changing because of the interoperability 
requirements under the DMA. Starting with iOS 26.2 in the EU, when a user sets 
up a new Apple Watch, their Wi-Fi network history will no longer sync from 
their iPhone.

The process will work like this: 

*       When your iPhone connects to a known network and your paired Apple 
Watch is with you, the network is automatically shared to your Apple Watch.
*       Any future new networks you connect to on your iPhone will 
automatically be shared to your Apple Watch, so long as the iPhone and Apple 
Watch are in the same place at the same time. If both devices are not together, 
the Wi-Fi network won’t be synced.

For example:

*       When you visit a coffee shop whose Wi-Fi you’ve previously used on your 
iPhone: if your iPhone and Apple Watch are both with you, the network 
information is shared to your Apple Watch. 

*       If you only have your Apple Watch and not your iPhone, you’ll need to 
connect manually on your Apple Watch. 

*       A new coffee shop you’ve never visited before: connect to its Wi-Fi 
with your iPhone and that Wi-Fi name and password will be shared to your Apple 
Watch.

Another example:

*       Your home Wi-Fi network: when your iPhone connects for the first time 
after setting up your new Apple Watch, the network is shared with your Apple 
Watch.
*       An Airbnb you’re visiting for the first time: connect to the Wi-Fi with 
your iPhone and that information will sync to your Apple Watch.

It’s a bit confusing, but it essentially boils down to access to Wi-Fi history. 
Under the DMA, third-party accessories must receive the same interoperability 
features that Apple’s own products receive.

Before iOS 26.2, that meant Apple Watch got your full historical Wi-Fi list all 
at once — and that exchange happened privately, device-to-device, without Apple 
ever seeing or storing it.

If Apple had kept that behavior, it would have been obligated to give 
equivalent access to third-party devices. Apple, however, would have no 
guarantees on how a third-party treats that data. 

As a result, Apple is removing historical Wi-Fi syncing for newly paired Apple 
Watches in the EU. In iOS 26.2 and watchOS 26.2:

*       When setting up a pair of Meta Ray-Ban Glasses, for example, your Wi-Fi 
history will not be shared with Meta. Only information about new Wi-Fi networks 
you join, while your iPhone and the accessory are together, will be shared. 

In a  <https://x.com/TimSweeneyEpic/status/1986222627003023630?s=20> post on X 
earlier this month, Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney questioned why Apple doesn’t 
just “ask the user whether or not to share Wi-Fi history identically, whether 
connecting to an Apple product or a Meta product.”

Sweeney’s framing, however, ignores how the feature works.

First, Apple itself never receives your Wi-Fi information. That data is shared 
privately, device-to-device, from your iPhone to your Apple Watch. The system 
is intentionally engineered so that Apple can’t see or store your network 
history. Everything it’s on your device. 

Second, there’s no mechanism by which Apple can ensure third parties keep that 
Wi-Fi data private. Once they receive it, nothing in the DMA prevents them from 
storing it, analyzing it, or using it to build detailed behavioral profiles 
around it.


9to5Mac’s Take


Taken together, this makes Apple’s approach in iOS 26.2 easy to understand.

I think where Apple has landed with iOS 26.2 and watchOS 26.2 is a perfectly 
fair position.

It’s reasonable to assume a company like Meta, with its horrific privacy track 
record, would ingest a user’s Wi-Fi history and use that information to build 
profiles on Apple users and learn patterns about their day-to-day lives.

Did you connect to a Wi-Fi network named “Starbucks Wi-Fi”? Great! Here are 
some ads for coffee. That’s a harmless example, but in today’s world there are 
also more serious implications. Do you really want Meta to know about the 
health clinic you visited six months ago?

Instead of building a system to store and share Wi-Fi history, Apple has opted 
for this approach in the EU.

iOS 26.2 is currently in beta testing. It’s expected to be released to everyone 
sometime next month.

Updated 6:08pm PT to correct details on the connection process for a new Apple 
Watch.

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*        <https://geni.us/gIre> USB-C cable with built-in screen
*        <https://geni.us/NSVtknY> The best earbuds for Apple users

Follow Chance:  <https://www.threads.net/@ChanceHMiller> Threads,  
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Richard, USA

"While striving for perfection, let us do what is possible." -- John Wesley

 

My web site: https://www.turner42.com

 

(sent from my iPhone 16 pro) 

 

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