2026 Guide · Anti-snatch

Phone Snatching: How to Avoid Getting Your Phone Grabbed

A thief rides up, grabs the phone right out of your hand, and vanishes in seconds. Here's how to stop being a target in 2026.

★ 4.9 · 898 backers1032 % funded on KickstarterAs seen on Dragons' Den
x2
snatch thefts in 5 years (major cities)
5 sec
and the phone is gone
8pm–12am
peak snatching hours
+100 lb
of force in the LOCKÜP™ lock

A red light, your phone in hand to check a message... and it's gone. Phone snatching — snatch-and-run — has become the number-one method used by phone thieves in big cities.

The script is almost always the same: one accomplice spots the target, a second rushes in on a bike or electric scooter, grabs the device held in hand and disappears into traffic before the victim even reacts. In five years, this type of theft has nearly doubled in several major cities and hit record highs — to the point that police now run dedicated operations and seize thousands of stolen two-wheelers.

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Why your phone is a target

An unlocked phone, held in hand on the street, is worth far more to a thief: it can be emptied of its data and access before being blocked, and resells for hundreds of dollars more. Held and untethered, it's the perfect target.

The action plan7 habits to avoid getting your phone snatched

1

Don't walk with your phone in hand near the road

Most snatches happen at the curb: at red lights, bus stops, on the traffic side of the sidewalk. Step back to send a message and keep the device on the building side — never road-side.

2

Watch for two-wheelers that slow down

A bike or scooter slowing to your pace, riding against traffic or up onto the sidewalk: that's the classic signal. Keep one ear free, lower the volume and stay aware of what's approaching, especially from behind.

3

Lock your screen and hide your notifications

An unlocked phone resells for much more and gives access to your accounts. Set auto-lock to 30 seconds, hide message previews (2FA codes show up there) and require biometrics for Apple Pay and Google Pay.

4

Avoid high-risk places and times

Metro exits, patios, lineups, festival crowds: thieves target dense spots where phones are out. The peak is in the evening, between 8 p.m. and midnight. Never set your phone down on a patio table.

The anti-snatch method
5

Physically tether your phone

It's the only method that makes snatching impossible. The LOCKÜP™ bracelet links your phone to your wrist with a patented magnetic lock rated at +100 lb of force. The thief pulls... and the device stays attached to you — not to them.

  • ✓ Patented
  • ✓ Dyneema® cord
  • ✓ All phones
  • ✓ Made in Québec
6

Turn on Find My and Stolen Device Protection

These settings don't prevent the snatch, but they limit the damage: locate, lock and erase remotely, and block sensitive actions. Turn them on now — see our complete guide to protecting your phone.

7

Have your “first 5 minutes” plan ready

If your phone is snatched anyway, every second counts. Know in advance what to do: here's exactly what to do in the first 5 minutes.

Software vs. physicalWhy only a tether stops a snatch

Software protections are essential… but they act after the theft: locate, lock, erase. None prevent the act itself. Against a snatch that takes five seconds, only a physical tether makes the difference between “a scare” and “my phone is gone.”

ProtectionStops the snatchRecovers afterProtects data
PIN + biometricsNoPartialYes
Find MyNoYesPartial
Stolen Device ProtectionNoPartialYes
LOCKÜP™ braceletYesYesYes*

*By preventing the theft, the bracelet also indirectly protects access to your data. Combine it with the settings above for complete protection.

★★★★★ 4.9 · 898 Kickstarter backers

LOCKÜP™ Bracelet

$40 CAD · free shipping $100+

The patented magnetic lock that attaches your phone to your wrist. Impossible to snatch, even with a hard yank.

  • Patented lock
  • +100 lb of force
  • Dyneema® cord
  • iPhone & Android
Protect my phone →
Code CARRYU10 · -10 %

Frequently asked questionsPhone snatching: your questions

What exactly is phone snatching?

It's grabbing an object held in hand — most often a phone — and fleeing immediately, usually on a bike or scooter. It's over in seconds, with no obvious violence, which makes it very hard to anticipate.

Why do thieves target unlocked phones?

An unlocked phone in use can be emptied of its data, banking access and accounts before being blocked — it resells for far more. That's why thieves watch for phones held in hand, screen on.

How do I avoid phone snatching by bike or scooter?

Keep your phone away from the road, stay alert to approaching two-wheelers, and above all physically tether your device to your wrist — for example with a LOCKÜP™ bracelet — so it simply can't be snatched.

Does the LOCKÜP™ bracelet really resist a snatch?

Yes. Its patented magnetic lock delivers over 100 lb of force and its cord is Dyneema®, a fiber stronger than steel by weight. Even with a hard yank, the phone stays connected to you.

What should I do right after a phone snatching?

Act in the first five minutes: mark the device as lost, suspend the line with your carrier, block the IMEI, change your passwords and alert your bank. Follow our first 5 minutes guide.

You can't snatch what's attached to you.

Adjust your settings, stay alert — then tether your phone. The LOCKÜP™ bracelet installs in seconds and goes everywhere with you.

Explore the LOCKÜP collection →