How to Find a Phone That's Turned Off or Offline
Dead battery, powered off, no signal: yes, you can often still locate it — with one condition. Here's how, on iPhone and Android.
A phone that won't respond, a “Find My” map frozen on “Offline,” a last location dropped two hours ago. The panic sets in. But before you give up: a phone that's off, dead, or out of signal isn't necessarily a lost phone.
Over the past few years, Apple and Google have turned every phone into a relay. The result: even powered off, your device can keep “whispering” its location over Bluetooth to the hundreds of millions of devices passing nearby. You just need to have switched on the right feature — ahead of time.
The non-negotiable condition
Offline location only works if “Find My” (iPhone) or “Find My Device” (Android) — and its offline network — were turned on BEFORE the loss. You can't enable it after the fact. Do it now, on every device you own.
The action planFinding a phone that's off or offline, step by step
Understand the “Find My” network
Your phone doesn't need its own connection. Apple's and Google's “Find My” networks rely on hundreds of millions of devices: when one of them passes your phone over Bluetooth, it relays its location in an encrypted, anonymous way. That's what makes it possible to locate a device that's offline — or even switched off.
On iPhone: “Findable even when off”
With iOS 15 and an iPhone 11 or newer, the device emits a secure Bluetooth signal for up to 24 hours after it's powered off (and even on low battery). Open the Find My app → Devices tab → select the device to see its location. In Settings, make sure “Find My network” is turned on.
On Android: “Find My Device”
Google's “Find My Device” network works without Wi-Fi or mobile data, using the same encrypted Bluetooth relay principle. On recent models (Pixel 8 and newer), it can locate the phone several hours after it's switched off. Go to android.com/find or the Find My Device app, and make sure you've set a PIN, pattern, or password.
Check the last known location
Even with no active connection, “Find My” keeps the last location sent before shutdown. That's often enough to know whether the phone stayed home, at the office, at a restaurant… or vanished somewhere on the street.
Turn on Lost Mode and an on-screen message
Lost Mode (iPhone) or secure lock (Android) locks the device remotely, shows a message with a callback number, and flags it the moment it powers back on or finds a signal. Turn it on right away, without waiting.
The best tracking is never losing it
All these features kick in after the loss — and only if everything was set up properly. The only way to skip the Bluetooth-signal chase is to keep the phone attached to you. The LOCKÜP™ bracelet links it to your wrist with a patented magnetic lock rated at +100 lb of force: it won't fall, won't get left on a table, and can't be snatched.
- ✓ Patented
- ✓ Dyneema® cord
- ✓ All phones
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If nothing shows up: erase, block, report
If the device stays unreachable, erase it remotely to protect your data, call your carrier to suspend the line and block the IMEI (dial *#06# to find it), change your important passwords, then report the loss or theft to the police.
Locate vs. preventWhy tracking isn't enough
The “Find My” networks are impressive, but they have limits: they depend on a setting turned on ahead of time, on a recent enough device, and on a time window (24 hours at most once powered off). Past that window — or if the feature wasn't active — all that's left is the last known location. Prevention depends on none of that.
| Method | Works offline | Works when off | Prevents loss |
|---|---|---|---|
| Find My network (iPhone) | Yes | Yes* | No |
| Find My Device (Android) | Yes | Partial | No |
| Last known location | Yes | Partial | No |
| LOCKÜP™ bracelet | — | — | Yes |
*Up to 24 hours after shutdown on iPhone 11 and newer. The bracelet doesn't locate anything: it simply removes the need to search, by keeping the phone attached to you.
LOCKÜP™ Bracelet
The patented magnetic lock that attaches your phone to your wrist. No more drops, no more forgotten phones, no more chasing a signal to find it.
- Patented lock
- +100 lb of force
- Dyneema® cord
- iPhone & Android
FAQPhone off or offline: your questions
Can you really find a phone that's turned off?
Yes — provided “Find My” and its offline network were turned on beforehand. An iPhone 11 or newer stays findable for up to 24 hours after shutdown; recent Android phones (Pixel 8 and newer), a few hours. Otherwise, you'll only see the last known location.
Does the “Find My” network work without Wi-Fi or data?
Yes. It relies on Bluetooth: nearby Apple or Android devices that pass your phone relay its location in an encrypted, anonymous way. No internet connection is needed on the lost phone itself.
What if “Find My” wasn't turned on?
Your options are limited: sign in to your iCloud or Google account to check for a possible last location, contact your carrier to suspend the line and block the IMEI, change your passwords, and report the loss to the police.
How long does it stay findable once it's off?
On recent iPhones, up to 24 hours thanks to a power reserve dedicated to Bluetooth. After that, only the last reported location stays visible.
How do I never lose my phone again?
Prevention wins every time: a LOCKÜP™ bracelet keeps the device attached to your wrist. It can't fall, can't be left on a table, and can't be snatched — so you never have to track it down.
The best tracker is the one that prevents the loss.
Turn on “Find My” on all your devices — then attach your phone. The LOCKÜP™ bracelet clips on in seconds and goes everywhere with you.
Explore the LOCKÜP collection →