Here is the list of additions in the current iOS 26.3 beta cycle, with the release approaching as Apple has recently pushed Release Candidates for 26.3. The headline theme is interoperability: switching between iPhone and Android gets easier, and some connected-device features expand in the European Union.
iOS 26.3 also brings a few practical privacy and customization tweaks. Some changes depend on your region, your device model, and even your carrier, so it helps to know what applies to you before you update.
Table of contents
- 1) Transfer to Android from Settings
- 2) “Limit precise location” for cellular networks
- 3) Notification Forwarding to third-party wearables (EU)
- 4) More EU-only connected-device changes
- 5) Wallpaper gallery changes, plus new Weather options
- 6) RCS groundwork for end-to-end encryption
- Known beta issue to watch
- FAQs
1) Transfer to Android from Settings
Apple adds a built-in “Transfer to Android” option that lets you move data wirelessly by placing your iPhone near an Android phone and starting the transfer from Settings. It is designed to reduce friction when you switch platforms.
What it can move (as described so far):
- Photos and videos
- Messages
- Notes
- Some apps and related data
- Your phone number (handoff as part of the flow)
What it does not move in the current beta descriptions:
- Health data
- Bluetooth pairing history
- Locked notes and other protected items
Where to find it:
- Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone > Transfer to Android
2) “Limit precise location” for cellular networks

iOS 26.3 introduces a new privacy toggle that reduces how precisely cellular networks can infer your location. In plain terms, carriers may get a broader area like a neighborhood instead of a street-level fix, while emergency location behavior stays accurate.
Key requirements mentioned so far:
- Supported hardware includes devices with Apple’s newer modem stack, including iPhone Air and iPhone 16e, plus cellular models of M5 iPad Pro
- Carrier support varies by country, and availability is not universal
Where to find it:
- Settings > Cellular > Cellular Data Options > Limit precise location (wording can vary slightly in betas)
3) Notification Forwarding to third-party wearables (EU)
In the European Union, iOS 26.3 adds Notification Forwarding so iPhone notifications can appear on certain third-party wearables, not just Apple Watch. Only one accessory can receive forwarded notifications at a time, and Apple Watch stops mirroring when forwarding is enabled.
This feature is tied to EU interoperability rules.
Where to find it:
- Settings > Notifications > Notification Forwarding
4) More EU-only connected-device changes
Alongside notification forwarding, iOS 26.3 is expected to expand a few building blocks for third-party accessories in the EU. Reports describe four headline areas:
- AirPods-style proximity pairing for third-party earbuds and accessories
- Expanded NFC access for third-party apps (beyond the usual Wallet-only path)
- High-bandwidth peer-to-peer Wi-Fi capabilities for device-to-device links
- Notification forwarding (covered above)
5) Wallpaper gallery changes, plus new Weather options
iOS 26.3 adjusts the wallpaper picker by splitting Weather and Astronomy into separate sections, and it adds more Weather wallpaper configurations that can show live weather elements. A Black Unity wallpaper is also expected around this release window.
6) RCS groundwork for end-to-end encryption
iOS 26.3 appears to lay groundwork for carriers to support end-to-end encrypted RCS messaging, based on what has surfaced in the beta notes coverage. This is more plumbing than a visible toggle for most people right now.
Known beta issue to watch
If you run iOS 26.3 beta 3 on certain newer devices, some Continuity features can break, including iPhone Mirroring, AirPlay mirroring to Apple TV 4K, wireless Continuity Camera, and Sidecar on the M5 iPad Pro. If you rely on those daily, avoid that specific beta build.
FAQs
It looks like a targeted update. Apple focuses on switching tools, a specific cellular privacy control, EU interoperability requirements, and a few interface tweaks like wallpapers.
No. Some features are EU-only like Notification Forwarding for third-party wearables, and the limit precise location toggle depends on specific hardware and carrier support.
Bottom line: Apple plans to release iOS 26.3 to the public in February 2026 after finishing the current beta cycle. The update will roll out worldwide over several days through Software Update in Settings.