Apple is developing an automatic lock mechanism designed to secure an iPhone in the seconds immediately after it is stolen, a feature that could reduce the value of the device to opportunistic thieves and close a window of vulnerability that existing protections do not address. The development was first reported by 9to5Mac, which identified references to the feature within iOS source code, indicating it is under active engineering rather than early conceptual planning.
The core problem the feature targets is timing. Most of Apple's existing theft deterrents, including Activation Lock, Lost Mode, and the Find My network, are designed to frustrate a thief's ability to resell or reset a phone after the fact. None of them prevent the brief but critical window immediately after a snatch, when a phone grabbed mid-use is still fully unlocked and accessible. It is in that window that thieves can most easily reach banking apps, password managers, and personal data, and it is precisely that vulnerability that the new feature is engineered to close.
Apple’s reported theft-detection feature would use multiple signals to spot when an iPhone is snatched. The accelerometer could detect sudden movement, while rapid separation from a paired Apple Watch or an abrupt location/network change may trigger alerts. Once confirmed, the iPhone would automatically lock and block biometric access or Apple Account changes until verified by the owner.
The move targets rising phone theft, as unlocked iPhones can be far more valuable to criminals due to access to banking apps, emails and personal data.
Activation Lock: Prevents a thief from disabling tracking or factory-resetting without the owner's Apple Account credentials. Effective, but only after the snatch.
Find My: Allows the owner to track the device's location remotely and trigger Lost Mode. Requires owner action after the theft has already occurred.
Stolen Device Protection: Restricts sensitive actions, like changing passwords, when the phone is away from familiar locations, adding a biometric confirmation step.
Security Delay: Forces a one-hour wait before major account changes, with a second biometric confirmation. Slows thieves down but does not lock on detection.
Android introduced a similar Theft Detection Lock in 2024 using AI to spot snatch movements and auto-lock the device. Apple’s reported version may use additional signals, including Apple Watch distance, for better accuracy. The company has not confirmed the feature, but it could be announced at WWDC in June.