Monica Reed

Photo: Canva

Help! I’m locked out of my iPhone!

Has your kid ever gotten a hold of your phone and pushed buttons till the phone locks you out?  No?  Just me?

Seriously, if you ever get locked out of your phone, here’s help…

First, you’ll need a computer to do it. And thankfully, either a Mac or a PC will work. If you have a PC however, it must be operating on Windows 10 or later, and it must be equipped with iTunes. If you don’t have access to a computer, you’ll have to go to either an Apple Store or an Apple Authorized Service Provider.

Here are the official, Apple-sanctioned steps to take if you are locked out of your iPhone and don’t know the passcode.

Step 1:
Turn off your iPhone and put it into recovery mode. To do this, you must press and hold a particular button on your iPhone while immediately connecting the iPhone to your computer. Which button? That depends on the model of your iPhone.

If you have an iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X and later, including iPhone SE (2nd and 3rd generation), the instructions say to “press and hold both the side button and the Volume down button until the power off slider appears.”
If you have an iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 6s, and iPhone 6, “press and hold the side button until the power off slider appears.”
If you have an iPhone SE (1st generation), iPhone 5s, and earlier, “press and hold the top button until the power off slider appears.”

Step 2:
Keep pressing the correct button down until the recovery mode screen appears on your iPhone. Then let go.

Step 3:
On the computer that it’s connected to, locate your iPhone in the Finder or in iTunes.

Step 4:
You’ll see the option to Restore or Update. Choose Restore, and the computer will begin the restore process. Apple says that “if the download takes more than 15 minutes and your device exits the recovery mode screen, let the download finish, then turn off your iPhone and start again.”

It’s important to note that recovery mode erases the information on your iPhone. When the process finishes, your phone will restart, and you’ll see a setup screen. Now you have access to set up your iPhone again. You can do this from a backup. If you didn’t back up your iPhone, you can set it up as a new device and then download any data that you have in iCloud.

 

Here’s a Second Option To Unlock Your iPhone
There’s another trick you can try to unlock your phone using Find My Phone.

This method works for iPhones that are synchronized to iCloud, and it also involves erasing the information on your phone. Sign in to iCloud.com on your Mac. Select “Find My iPhone” and choose the iPhone you want to erase. Select “Erase iPhone,” and enter your Apple ID password and phone number. After you’ve erased the information on your phone, you will be able to access it and restore it with the latest version of your information that’s been backed up by iCloud.

 

 

Here’s An Unofficial, Non-Apple-Sanctioned Way to Unlock Your iPhone Without A Passcode
Not surprisingly, YouTube and TikTok are brimming with hacks from iPhone users about how to unlock iPhones without a passcode. Jaime Stathis at Reader’s Digest highlighted one particular video as easy and foolproof. “You can practice doing this on your own iPhone by covering the camera so Face ID doesn’t work,” Stathis writes.

Be warned: This video also works as a cautionary tale about how easy it is for anyone to get access to the information on your phone. Here’s what the video says to do:

Open the Control Center.
Turn off Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and cellular data. Turn on Airplane Mode.
Open the calculator.
Turn the phone sideways. (Go into scientific calculator mode.)
Type a period and then “in.”
When “error” pops up, hit Rad to release the error.
Swipe up, and the iPhone is unlocked.

 

News from ClarksvilleNow.com

The suspect's hat following the shooting outside the Montgomery County Courthouse on May 13, 2026. (Enrique Hernandez, Dash 10 Media)

today in News, Opinion, Podcasts, The Clarksville Rundown

The Clarksville Rundown: What led up to courthouse shooting involving racism-fueled social videos? | PODCAST

A Clarksville man has been recording himself taunting Black people with racial slurs. This week, a confrontation ended in gunfire. Here’s what led up to it and what happens next.

today in Military, News

TriStar Health announces $100,000 gift to support Tennessee Wings of Liberty Museum in Fort Campbell

TriStar Health announced on Friday morning that they are gifting the Tennessee Wings of Liberty Museum in Fort Campbell $100,000 in support of the new landmark museum and to honor the region’s military legacy.

Person wearing blue hoodie, dark jeans, cap, and face mask standing outside a storefront. (CCTV-style image)

yesterday in Crime, News

Wanted in Clarksville: Police seek man accused of taking photos over MAPCO restroom stall

The suspect followed a woman into the MAPCO restroom and held a cellphone over the stall wall, according to police.

Property at 1485 Golf Club Lane on May 13, 2026. (Christian Brown)

yesterday in News

City holds public discussion on proposed community services facility on Golf Club Lane

The City of Clarksville’s Neighborhood and Community Services Department held a public meeting to provide information and receive community feedback.

yesterday in News

19 homeowners sue Montgomery County over flooding, pumping during April 2025 storms

Nineteen Farmington area homeowners have filed a lawsuit blaming Montgomery County for damage to their homes during April 2025 flooding in the Clarksville area.