Apple Stops Signing iOS 26.2, Downgrades No Longer Possible

New Spyware Alerts Make iOS 26.2 the Most Important Update This Month

Apple has stopped signing iOS 26.2. This change means iPhone users who already updated to iOS 26.2.1 can no longer downgrade to the earlier version. The move follows last week’s release of iOS 26.2.1, which added support for AirTag 2 and included general bug fixes.

Apple made the change quietly, as it usually does after a new update ships. Once Apple stops signing an iOS version, the system blocks installation, even if users try to restore their device using a Mac or Windows PC.

Software signing is Apple’s server side approval process. Every iOS update must pass this check before it installs on an iPhone. When Apple stops signing a version, the system rejects it during setup. As a result, downgrades become impossible, even for users who have the update file saved.

Until now, users on iOS 26.2.1 could still return to iOS 26.2. That window has closed. From this point forward, iOS 26.2.1 remains the only option for devices already updated.

Apple blocks downgrades

Apple uses signing to keep devices on newer, more secure software. Older versions often lack recent fixes, even when release notes do not list specific security changes. For example, the iOS 26.2.1 release notes mentioned that the update adds support for second-generation AirTags and includes bug fixes, with no CVEs listed. Even so, Apple typically treats the newer build as safer and more stable.

Other iOS versions no longer signed

Apple also stopped signing several older releases for devices that cannot update to iOS 26. These include:

  • iOS 12.5.7
  • iOS 15.8.5
  • iOS 16.7.12
  • iOS 18.7.3

Newer replacements arrived recently, such as iOS 12.5.8, iOS 15.8.6, iOS 16.7.14, and iOS 18.7.4.

In short, if your iPhone runs iOS 26.2.1, you are locked in. Apple has closed the downgrade path, as it usually does soon after a new release.

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