Don’t want to continue with the encrypted messages on your iPhone? Follow the guide to know how you can pause these for as long as you want. So, let’s get started.
Steps to turn off encrypted messages on an iPhone
If someone wants to turn off their encrypted messages on an iPhone, then these steps would come in handy.
- To start, open the Settings app on your iPhone and scroll down. Now tap on Apps and then select Messages.
- Look for the iMessage toggle switch near the top of the screen.
- Here you have to tap on the toggle switch to turn it off. It will change from green to grey, which is a sign that it has been successfully turned off.
- What happens when you do so is that turning off iMessage stops your iPhone from sending end-to-end encrypted blue-bubble messages to other Apple devices. Your phone will now use standard SMS or MMS text messages instead.
- These standard carrier texts appear as green bubbles and do not have end-to-end encryption like you used to have in your texts before your change of settings.
- Just be mindful that disabling this feature means you will lose access to standard iMessage benefits that you were getting. It means that you will no longer see typing indicators, read receipts, or even high-quality media sharing with other iPhone users.
- Also, if you use FaceTime, you can manage its encryption separately. For this, you have to go back to the main Settings menu, tap Apps, and choose FaceTime.
- Toggle the FaceTime switch to off if you want to disable encrypted video and audio calls entirely.
- For third-party apps like WhatsApp or Signal, encryption cannot be turned off in settings, and that shouldn’t be a problem. Deleting them entirely would fix it.
What happens when we turn off encrypted messages on an iPhone?
When you switch off iMessage on your iPhone, you are basically stepping off Apple’s secure messaging network and taking care of it on your own. Your conversations with other iPhone users will immediately shift from the usual blue bubbles to standard green SMS text messages.
Because you are moving to a carrier network, your messages lose their end-to-end encryption. This means they are no longer protected or put away from your cellular provider. Beyond security, certain things will change, like losing access to modern features like real-time typing bubbles, read receipts, and the ability to send high-quality, uncompressed photos or videos. Group chats with iPhone users will also break into unencrypted MMS threads. It is not so bad if this is what you want to do.




