AirTags vs DeWalt Tool Connect: The App Was Pulled in 2025
The Core Problem with DeWalt Tool Connect
On February 13, 2025, DeWalt unpublished the Tool Connect app from Google Play after nearly 10 years. The final release note read: "Please download DEWALT Site Manager to continue managing your DEWALT tools." The replacement, DEWALT Site Manager, holds 2.6 of 5 stars across 58 App Store ratings as of June 2026. The app it replaced held 3.6 stars across roughly 2,300.
If you are comparing tracking systems in 2026, that is the fact that matters most. Every tag you buy, every tool you catalog, and every workflow you build on a manufacturer's tracking platform depends on that manufacturer keeping the software alive. DeWalt's tag owners just lived through what happens when it doesn't.
AirTags run on Apple's Find My network, the same infrastructure behind every iPhone's lost-device features, with 2.5B+ active devices detecting tags. Apple has shipped and supported Find My continuously since 2010.
What Happened to Tool Connect: The Timeline
| Date | Event | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Aug 2015 | Tool Connect app launches on Google Play | AppBrain |
| 2021 | DCE042 Chip ($15) and DCE081 Gateway ($399) launch | ToolGuyd |
| Dec 9, 2024 | Final Tool Connect app update (v2.10.6) | AppBrain |
| Feb 13, 2025 | Tool Connect app unpublished from Google Play | AppBrain |
| 2025 | DCE041 single tag listed as discontinued; DCE045 replaces it | DeWalt |
| Aug 2025 | ToolHound drops Tool Connect Site Manager integration (v6.2025.813.0) | ToolHound |
The hardware line survives under the Site Manager platform, but the consumer-grade app that individual contractors used for tool settings and tracking is gone. DeWalt's own support docs include an article titled "I just changed phones or downloaded the Tool Connect App update, and now don't see my tools?", which tells you how cleanly inventory survived the transition for some users.
DeWalt Site Manager Actual Pricing: What Customers Report Paying
DeWalt does not publish complete Site Manager pricing. Capterra lists it as contact-the-vendor with no free trial. Here is what surfaces in reviews and retail listings:
| Item | Price | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Site Manager free tier | $0, capped at 30 assets (connectors count separately) | App Store review |
| Site Manager next tier | $2,500/year for 750 assets, per reviewer | App Store review |
| DCE045 Tool Connect Tag, 25-pack | $478.93 (~$19.16/tag) | Toolup |
| DCE045 Tool Connect Tag, 100-pack | $1,918.93 (~$19.19/tag) | Toolup |
| DCE042 Tool Connect Chip | $15 MSRP | ToolGuyd |
| DCE040 20V MAX Connector | $39 | Pro Tool Reviews |
| DCE081 Construction Asset Gateway | $399 MSRP, $453 to $475 street | DeWalt, The Power Tool Store |
Worked example for a 100-tool fleet that wants automated tracking:
- Tool Connect route: 100 tags ($1,919) + 2 gateways for truck and tool crib ($800 to $950 street) + the paid Site Manager tier reviewers report at $2,500/year. Year one: roughly $5,200 to $5,400. And the tags still only report when they pass a gateway or a phone running the app.
- AirTags + Airpinpoint route: 100 AirTags at $24.75 in 4-packs ($2,475) + Airpinpoint Business at $11.99/device/month. No gateways, no contracts, and every tag reports through 2.5B+ Find My devices instead of hardware you install.
Tool Connect is cheaper only if you stay under 30 assets on the free tier and never need to find a tool that left the jobsite.
The Tracking Architecture Problem
Tool Connect tags have no crowd-sourced network. Per Pro Tool Reviews' guide, tags connect up to 100 feet from a Tool Connect-enabled device and report a "Last Seen" street address, not a live position. Coverage comes from exactly two sources:
- A phone running the Site Manager app, within ~100 ft
- A DCE081 gateway ($399 each) mounted on a vehicle, job box, or tool room
AirTags broadcast to any nearby Apple device in the Find My network. There are 2.5B+ of them, carried by strangers, and detection is automatic and anonymous. A stolen tool in the back of a pickup gets pinged by the thief's own iPhone.
Theft scenario, both systems
Tool Connect: the tool leaves your gateway's range and goes dark. It reappears only if it happens to pass within 100 ft of your own phone or another of your gateways. Recovery depends on luck.
AirTag: the tool keeps reporting as it moves past iPhones in traffic, at the pawn shop, in a residential neighborhood. You hand a current address to the police. This is the scenario in the testimonial above, and it is the reason "can it find stolen tools" is the question that should drive this purchase.
Feature Comparison
| Feature | AirTags + Airpinpoint | DeWalt Tool Connect / Site Manager |
|---|---|---|
| Works with | Any brand, any asset | DeWalt/Stanley Black & Decker ecosystem |
| Tracking network | 2.5B+ Apple devices | Your phones + $399 gateways only |
| Location type | Continuous network updates | Last-seen address within ~100 ft |
| Off-site theft recovery | Yes | Effectively no |
| Software cost | Free (Find My); Airpinpoint $11.99/device/mo for business features | Free to 30 assets; $2,500/yr tier per reviewers |
| Contract | None | Annual subscription tiers |
| Tag hardware | $29 each, $24.75 in 4-packs | ~$19/tag (25-packs), $15 chip, $39 connector |
| Gateway hardware required | None | $399 MSRP per gateway for automated audits |
| Tag battery | ~1 year, user-replaceable CR2032 | 3 years, per 2021 specs |
| Tool settings (speed, torque) | No | Yes, on Tool Connect-enabled tools |
| Runtime/maintenance data | No | Yes |
| Remote tool lockout | No | Yes, within Bluetooth range |
| Precision Finding | Yes (UWB on iPhone 11+) | No |
| App rating (June 2026) | Find My ships with iOS | 2.6/5, 58 ratings |
| Platform track record | Find My continuous since 2010 | Original app removed Feb 2025 |
| Geofencing | Polygon geofences + alerts (Airpinpoint) | Jobsite audits via gateway |
| API/webhooks | REST API + webhooks (Airpinpoint) | ToolHound integration dropped 2025 |
Where DeWalt Tool Connect Genuinely Wins
Real advantages, not strawmen:
- Tool-level control. Tool Connect-enabled tools expose speed, torque, and trigger settings AirTags cannot touch. If you tune impact drivers per application, nothing in the Apple ecosystem replaces that.
- Runtime and maintenance data. Hours of operation and service tracking come from inside the tool. An AirTag knows where a tool is, never how hard it has worked.
- Remote lockout. Disabling a tool that comes back into Bluetooth range makes stolen DeWalt tools less useful to resell. It is a real deterrent, even if it cannot locate anything.
- Tag battery life. 3 years versus roughly 1 year on an AirTag's CR2032.
- Cheaper tags at volume. ~$19 per DCE045 tag in 25-packs versus $24.75 per AirTag in 4-packs.
- Free under 30 assets. A small DeWalt-only crew that never loses tools off-site pays $0 in software.
- Gateway audits. A $399 gateway on a tool crib does automatic inventory checks without anyone opening an app. Airpinpoint's geofence alerts cover the "did it leave the yard" case, but scheduled physical audits of a fixed room are a genuine Tool Connect strength.
What Users Say
The pattern across App Store reviews of the replacement app and DeWalt's own Known Issues page:
- Broken basics. Reviewers report links broken throughout the app, a terms-of-service loop that blocks sign-in, and text fields where the keyboard never appears. DeWalt's Known Issues page confirms a login loop where correct credentials bounce users back to the sign-in screen.
- Tags that won't enroll. The Known Issues page documents DCE045 tags failing to add via QR code; the workaround is manual Bluetooth pairing.
- Pricing shock at the tier wall. The free tier stops at 30 assets, connectors count as separate entries, and a reviewer reports the next tier is 750 assets at $2,500/year, which they called unreasonable for "very little this software has to offer."
- Migration resentment. One reviewer wrote that DeWalt "went from something slightly broken but useable to an app that is even more problematic," and another told DeWalt to "either take this limping jalopy down for long enough to make it worth using, or spend the time and money to build something new."
- Missing catalog data. Users report their own DeWalt tools absent from the app's database despite scannable QR codes.
For balance: the lone Capterra review rates it 5/5 for ease of use and praises support, while scoring features 3/5 for the lack of real-time tracking.
Which System for Which Job
Solo contractor or small crew, mixed-brand tools: AirTags. One tracker model for the DeWalt drill, the Makita saw, the generator, and the trailer. No tier walls at 30 assets.
Jobsite tool crib, all DeWalt, under 30 assets: Tool Connect's free tier plus a gateway is a workable audit system, as long as you accept that anything stolen is gone.
Theft-prone work (tools in trucks overnight, open sites): AirTags, no contest. Last-seen-address tracking cannot recover a tool that left the site. The Find My network can and does.
Fleet of 50+ assets across multiple sites: AirTags + Airpinpoint. At the scale where Site Manager's reported $2,500/year tier kicks in, Airpinpoint gives you a web dashboard, location history, polygon geofencing, webhooks, REST API, and team access at $11.99/device/month with no contract, and the tracking actually works off-site.
Heavy DeWalt investment in Tool Connect-enabled tools: run both. Tool Connect for settings, runtime, and lockout. AirTags on the same tools for location. They do not compete; one manages tools, the other finds them.
Our Recommendation
DeWalt built a tool management platform and marketed it as tracking. The management features (settings, runtime, lockout) are real and AirTags do not replace them. The tracking is an honor-system map of where your own phones and gateways last saw a tag.
The bigger issue is platform risk. DeWalt removed its 10-year-old app in February 2025, shipped a replacement that rates 2.6 stars, and let its main third-party integration lapse the same year. Apple's Find My network has 2.5B+ devices and ships inside every iPhone. When you bolt a tracker to a $700 rotary hammer, you are betting the tracker's software outlives the tool. Choose the platform where that bet is safe.
For business tool tracking, put a $29 AirTag ($24.75 in 4-packs) on anything you cannot afford to lose, and run them through Airpinpoint at $11.99/device/month for the dashboard, history, geofences, and API. No gateways to mount, no asset-count tiers, no contracts, and no risk of the app disappearing from the store.


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