How to Safely Lend Your iPhone Using Guided Access: A Step-by-Step Guide
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Introduction
Handing your unlocked iPhone to someone else can feel like handing over the keys to your digital kingdom—photos, messages, banking apps, all within reach. Yet there’s a lesser-known tool built into iOS that completely removes that anxiety. Guided Access lets you lock your iPhone to a single app, disable touch in certain areas, and control which features the other person can access. I use it every single time someone wants to borrow my device. Here’s how you can do the same.

What You Need
- An iPhone running iOS 6 or later (most iPhones from 2013 onward)
- Access to Settings and the ability to set a passcode
- A clear idea of which app you want to lend (e.g., Photos, Maps, a game)
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Open Settings and Navigate to Guided Access
Go to Settings > Accessibility > Guided Access. If you have trouble finding it, use the search bar at the top of Settings. - Turn On Guided Access
Tap the toggle next to Guided Access to enable the feature. - Set a Passcode
Tap Passcode Settings > Set Guided Access Passcode. Enter a unique four-digit code that is not the same as your lock screen passcode. You can also enable Face ID or Touch ID as an alternative way to end a session. - Customize Accessibility Shortcuts (Optional)
Under Accessibility Shortcut, you can enable Guided Access so that triple-clicking the side or Home button immediately starts it. This saves time when you need to lend your phone quickly. - Open the App You Want to Share
Launch the specific app you want the borrower to use—for example, the Photos app if they want to see vacation pictures. - Start a Guided Access Session
Triple-click the side button (iPhone X and later) or the Home button (older models). A toolbar will appear. Tap Options in the bottom-left corner to configure session settings:- Sleep/Wake Button: Disable it so the borrower can’t lock the screen.
- Volume Buttons: Disable to prevent accidental volume changes.
- Motion: Disable to stop screen rotation.
- Keyboards: Disable if you don’t want them typing search terms.
- Touch: You can even circle areas of the screen you want to disable—for instance, block the Delete button or a Settings gear icon.
- Hand Over the Phone
The borrower can use the app freely but cannot exit it, open other apps, or access your notifications, control center, or home screen. If they try to triple-click, nothing happens without the passcode. - End the Session
When you get your phone back, triple-click the side or Home button. Enter your Guided Access passcode (or use Face ID / Touch ID) to exit. The phone returns to normal.
Tips for a Smoother Experience
- Set up the passcode before you lend your phone. Doing it in front of someone can be awkward and may tip them off to the feature.
- Use Guided Access for more than lending. It’s great for keeping kids within a single app, for presentation mode, or for focusing on one task without distractions.
- If you use Face ID, you can set the accessibility shortcut to require Face ID, making it even faster to start and stop sessions.
- Don’t forget to disable touch on sensitive areas. For example, when sharing a photo album, circle the Share button to prevent the borrower from sending pictures to themselves.
- Practice the triple-click a few times so it becomes muscle memory. It’s the only way to start and stop the session.
- Guided Access works with nearly every app—from Safari and YouTube to banking apps (though you may not want to lend those!).
- Your iPhone will still receive calls and notifications, but they won’t interrupt the session. The borrower won’t see the content of incoming messages.
By following these steps, you can lend your iPhone with total peace of mind. Guided Access is one of iOS’s most underrated features, and once you start using it, you’ll wonder how you ever shared your phone without it.

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