AirTag Not Updating Location? Start Here
- Pull to refresh. Open Find My, tap the Items tab, and drag the list down. This re-syncs with iCloud and pulls in reports that arrived since you opened the app.
- Turn on Location Services. Go to Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services and make sure it's ON.
- Set Find My to Always + Precise. In Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services > Find My, choose Always and toggle Precise Location ON.
- Turn on the Find My network. Go to Settings > [your name] > Find My > Find My iPhone and enable Find My network.
- Toggle Airplane Mode. Turn Airplane Mode ON, wait 10 seconds, turn it OFF, then reopen Find My.
- Still stuck? The tag is out of range of every nearby Apple device. Replace the battery if it's low, or enable Lost Mode so the network prioritizes reporting it.

Most "not updating" problems are one of two things: the app is showing stale cached data (fixed by pulling to refresh), or no Apple device has passed near the tag recently (a coverage problem, not a settings problem). The sections below cover both, plus the specific errors people hit.
AirTag Says "No Location Found"? Here's What It Means
"No Location Found" means no iPhone, iPad, or Mac on the Find My network has detected your AirTag recently, so Apple has no fresh position to show you. The tag itself is almost always fine. It just hasn't been seen.
Common causes:
- The AirTag is somewhere with little Apple device traffic (a rural road, a closed warehouse at night, your own empty garage).
- It's inside metal or thick concrete that blocks its Bluetooth signal (a tool case, a vehicle frame, a basement).
- The battery is dead, so it has stopped advertising entirely.
- The tag was reset or removed from your account by someone else.
How to fix it:
- Pull down on the Items list to force a fresh iCloud sync. If a recent report exists, this surfaces it.
- Enable Lost Mode so passing devices report the tag more aggressively, and you get a push the moment it's seen.
- If it stays "No Location Found" for hours, walk or drive toward the last known location. The instant your own iPhone gets within Bluetooth range (~30 ft), it detects the tag directly and the location resolves in seconds.
AirTag Not Reachable or Won't Pair After a Battery Change
If your AirTag won't reconnect after you swapped the battery, or Find My shows it as unreachable, reset it to factory settings and pair it fresh:
- Press down on the polished stainless steel back of the AirTag and rotate counterclockwise to remove the cover, then take out the battery.
- Reinsert the battery and press down until you hear a sound.
- Repeat remove-reinsert-press five times total. You'll hear a sound on each of the first four presses.
- On the fifth press the sound is different from the previous four. That tone means the AirTag is reset and ready to pair.
- Put the cover back on, hold the AirTag next to your unlocked iPhone, and follow the pairing prompt.
The 2nd-generation AirTag adds a roughly 12-second wait between battery removals; the original model does not. If pairing still fails, confirm the battery is a fresh CR2032 seated positive (+) side up, and that Bluetooth is on.
Make Sure You're on the Items Tab
A surprising number of "my AirTag disappeared" reports are just the wrong tab. Find My has separate tabs for People, Devices, and Items. AirTags and Find My accessories live under Items, not Devices (Devices is for your iPhone, iPad, AirPods, and Watch). If your tag isn't showing at all, tap Items first before assuming anything is broken.
How Often AirTags Actually Update
AirTags have no GPS and no cellular radio. They can't report their own position. Instead they ride Apple's Find My network through a two-phase relay:
- The AirTag broadcasts a rotating, encrypted Bluetooth advertisement every couple of seconds.
- Any nearby Apple device that hears it (a stranger's iPhone, a Mac in a window) anonymously notes the location and uploads an encrypted report to Apple's servers.
- When you open Find My, your phone queries those servers and decrypts the latest report for your tag.
So the freshness of a location comes down to one thing: how recently an Apple device passed near the tag. We run this fetch pipeline at scale, and in practice a tag sitting near regular foot traffic refreshes every few minutes, while an isolated or rural tag can go hours because far fewer Apple devices pass within Bluetooth range.
Two more reasons a timestamp goes stale even when the tag is perfectly healthy:
- Report batching and throttling. Detections aren't streamed the instant they happen. Devices batch and upload reports on their own schedule, so there's often a few-minute gap between when the tag was detected and when you can see it.
- On-demand refresh re-syncs iCloud, it does not ping the tag. Pulling to refresh pulls the newest reports Apple already has. It cannot reach out and wake a tag that no device has heard. The only true on-demand update is your own iPhone getting within range and detecting it directly.
The takeaway: a timestamp reading "4 min ago" means the network saw the tag 4 minutes ago and it's alive and reporting. A timestamp frozen for hours almost always means coverage, not a fault with the tag or your settings.
If you're refreshing AirTag locations all day for work, checking trailers, equipment, or vehicles, that's the workflow Airpinpoint automates: it requests fresh locations when you open the map and shows every tag's last-report time on one dashboard.
10 Proven Fixes for AirTag Location Not Updating
1. Replace the AirTag Battery
This is the #1 cause of location update failures. AirTag batteries (CR2032) last about a year, but can drain faster in extreme temperatures.
How to check: Open Find My app, tap your AirTag, look for a "Low Battery" indicator.
How to replace:
- Press down on the stainless steel back
- Rotate counterclockwise until it stops
- Remove the old CR2032 battery
- Insert new battery with positive (+) side up
- Press back cover and rotate clockwise to lock
Pro tip: Use a name-brand battery (Duracell, Energizer). Some generic batteries have a bitter coating that interferes with the AirTag's contacts.
2. Toggle Airplane Mode On and Off
This forces your iPhone to refresh all wireless connections, including Bluetooth and cellular, both essential for Find My network communication.
- Swipe down from top-right corner (or up from bottom on older iPhones)
- Tap Airplane Mode to turn it ON
- Wait 10 seconds
- Tap Airplane Mode to turn it OFF
- Open Find My and check for updates
3. Verify Location Services Are Set to "Always"
Find My needs constant location access to work properly.
- Go to Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services
- Ensure Location Services is ON
- Scroll down and tap Find My
- Select "Always" (not "While Using")
- Enable "Precise Location"
4. Check That Find My Is Enabled Correctly
Sometimes settings get accidentally disabled during iOS updates.
- Go to Settings > [Your Name] > Find My
- Ensure these are all ON:
- Find My iPhone
- Find My network
- Send Last Location
5. Remove and Re-Add the AirTag
This refreshes the connection between your AirTag and iCloud.
- Open Find My > Items
- Tap your AirTag, scroll down, tap Remove Item
- Confirm removal
- Hold your AirTag near your iPhone
- Follow the setup prompts to re-add it
6. Check for iOS Updates
Apple frequently fixes Find My bugs in iOS updates.
- Go to Settings > General > Software Update
- If an update is available, download and install
- After restart, check if location updates resume
7. Reset Network Settings
This clears any Bluetooth or Wi-Fi configuration issues that might interfere with Find My.
- Go to Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone
- Tap Reset > Reset Network Settings
- Enter your passcode
- Your iPhone will restart
Note: This erases saved Wi-Fi passwords, so have them ready.
8. Sign Out and Back Into iCloud
This forces a complete refresh of your Find My data.
- Go to Settings > [Your Name], scroll down, tap Sign Out
- Enter your Apple ID password
- Choose to keep a copy of your data on the device
- After signing out, sign back in
- Open Find My and check your AirTag
9. Enable Lost Mode for Better Updates
When you enable Lost Mode, your AirTag prioritizes sending location updates and you'll receive notifications when it's detected.
- Open Find My > Items
- Tap your AirTag, tap Enable under Lost Mode
- Enter a phone number and message (optional)
- Tap Activate
How Lost Mode differs from normal tracking:
- Normal mode: Updates only when your own devices are nearby
- Lost Mode: Prioritizes updates from ANY device in the Find My network
- Lost Mode: Sends push notifications when location changes
10. Factory Reset the AirTag
If nothing else works, reset the AirTag to factory settings.
- Remove the AirTag battery
- Reinsert the battery and press down until you hear a sound
- Repeat this process 5 times total (remove, insert, press)
- On the 5th press, you'll hear a different tone indicating reset
- Re-pair the AirTag with your iPhone
Why Your AirTag Location Isn't Updating: Root Causes
The AirTag Is in a Low-Traffic Area
AirTags depend on passing Apple devices to relay their location. If your AirTag is:
- In a rural area with few iPhone users
- Inside a metal container or vehicle (blocks Bluetooth)
- In a basement or underground parking garage
...it may not update until someone with an iPhone comes within ~30 feet.
Bluetooth Interference
AirTags use Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE). Interference can come from:
- Multiple Bluetooth devices in close proximity
- Wi-Fi routers operating on overlapping frequencies
- Microwave ovens (when running)
- Physical obstructions like thick concrete or metal
iCloud Sync Issues
Your AirTag's location is stored in iCloud. If iCloud isn't syncing properly:
- Check iCloud status at apple.com/support/systemstatus
- Ensure you have available iCloud storage
- Verify you're using the same Apple ID on all devices
The AirTag Is Moving Too Fast
When an AirTag is in a moving vehicle on a highway, passing iPhones may not have enough time to complete the Bluetooth handshake needed to relay location. You might see gaps in the location history during highway travel.
AirTag Location Update: What to Realistically Expect
Based on real-world data and user reports:
| Environment | Expected Update Time |
|---|---|
| City center | 1-5 minutes |
| Shopping mall | 2-10 minutes |
| Residential neighborhood | 10-30 minutes |
| Parked car in suburban area | 30 minutes - 2 hours |
| Rural highway | Variable (depends on traffic) |
| Remote cabin | Days (until someone passes by) |
Important: The timestamp shown in Find My is when the location was detected, not when it was uploaded. There can be a delay of several minutes between detection and your seeing the update.
When AirTag Updates Just Won't Work
Sometimes an AirTag legitimately can't update:
- Stolen items: Thieves may remove batteries or place AirTags in signal-blocking pouches
- International travel: Some countries have fewer Apple devices in the Find My network
- Truly remote locations: If no Apple device passes within Bluetooth range, no update is possible
In these cases, your best option is to enable Lost Mode and wait. When the AirTag is eventually detected, you'll receive a notification.
FAQ
How long does it take for an AirTag to update its location?
In areas with good Apple device coverage (cities, airports, malls), expect updates every 1-15 minutes. In suburban or rural areas, updates may take 30 minutes to several hours. AirTags don't update on a fixed schedule, they update whenever a device in the Find My network detects them.
Why does my AirTag show a location from hours ago?
The displayed location is the last time any Apple device detected your AirTag. If your AirTag is in a location with few iPhones (rural area, inside a closed business at night), it won't update until someone with an iPhone comes within ~30 feet.
Can I force my AirTag to update its location?
Not remotely. The only guaranteed update is getting your own iPhone within Bluetooth range, which triggers a direct detection in seconds. From a distance, your best levers are pulling down to refresh the Items list (re-syncs iCloud), reopening Find My, and enabling Lost Mode so the network prioritizes your tag. See the quick fix checklist at the top for the full list.
How do I update an AirTag's location on the map?
You don't push updates to an AirTag, the network pushes them to you. The map updates whenever any Apple device passes the tag. If the map looks stale: pull down on the Items list, reopen the app, and check the timestamp under the item name. A recent timestamp with an unexpected position usually means the AirTag genuinely moved.
Does Lost Mode make AirTags update more frequently?
Yes. In Lost Mode, your AirTag is prioritized in the Find My network, meaning other Apple devices are more likely to report its location. You'll also receive instant notifications when it's detected, whereas normal mode may delay non-critical updates.
Why is my AirTag location accurate sometimes and way off other times?
Location accuracy depends on how the AirTag was detected:
- Direct detection by your iPhone: Precise to within a few feet (uses Bluetooth + Ultra Wideband)
- Detection by another iPhone: Accurate to within 10-50 feet
- Detection by another Apple device (Mac, iPad): May be less precise
- Last known location before battery died: Could be outdated by hours or days
My AirTag says "No Location Found" - what does this mean?
It means no Apple device has detected your AirTag recently, so Apple has no fresh position to show. Common reasons: the battery is dead, the tag is in a signal-blocking container, it's somewhere with no Apple device traffic, or it was removed from your account or reset by someone else. See the No Location Found section above for the fixes.
Track Multiple AirTags More Effectively
If you're managing multiple AirTags for business assets, family items, or fleet tracking, consider using Airpinpoint to get:
- Consolidated dashboard: View all AirTag locations in one interface
- Location history: See where your items have been over time
- Movement alerts: Get notified when items move unexpectedly
- Team access: Share tracking with employees or family members
- API access: Integrate AirTag data into your existing systems
Last updated: June 2026. This guide is based on iOS 18+ and may vary slightly with future updates.
