Apple’s new AirTag is a rare kind of upgrade, it doesn’t ask you to pay more, it just tries to help you find your stuff faster. The biggest changes target the two moments that waste time: When your phone knows the tag is nearby but can’t guide you soon enough, and when you can’t hear it over everyday noise.
Apple says the updated tracker improves both its basic locating range and its Precision Finding guidance, and it adds a louder speaker with a new chime. Privacy protections remain part of the pitch, with Apple framing AirTag as an object tracker and emphasizing safeguards meant to reduce unwanted tracking.
Orders are open now online, with in-store availability later this week.
A longer leash for Precision Finding
The new AirTag uses Apple’s second-generation Ultra Wideband chip. Apple says Precision Finding can guide you from up to 50 percent farther away than the prior model, using haptics, on-screen direction, and sound to narrow in.
There’s also an upgraded Bluetooth chip designed to extend the range where the tag can be detected through Find My, which should help before you get close enough for the more precise guidance to kick in.
Apple also expands where you can use that close-range guidance. Precision Finding now works on Apple Watch Series 9 or later and Apple Watch Ultra 2 or later, so you can finish the last steps from your wrist.
The louder speaker matters
Range matters, but the speaker is what you’ll notice in a cluttered home. Apple says the redesigned speaker is up to 50 percent louder and audible from up to twice as far, and the new chime is meant to stand out from normal household noise.
That’s the difference between a quick retrieval and a full-room search. If a tag is wedged under cushions, buried in a bag, or stuck in a coat pocket, louder audio turns those last seconds into a simple check.

Apple also keeps the familiar basics, including a replaceable CR2032 battery and the same water and dust resistance rating.
The upgrade decision, simplified
If you’re shopping for your first tracker, the new AirTag is the easy default at the same price. If you already own AirTags, the upgrade makes the most sense if Precision Finding is a routine tool for you, or if you’ve had trouble hearing the tag in noisy spaces.
Before you buy, check compatibility. Apple says you’ll need a supported iPhone on iOS 26 or later, or an iPad on iPadOS 26 or later, and some features require Find My enabled in iCloud settings. If your setup is ready, the practical next step is simple, swap in the new tags where you lose things most.
