Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

iOS 27 might finally let you create your own custom digital passes in Apple Wallet

For years, getting a pass into Apple Wallet meant hoping your gym, airline, or coffee chain had done the integration work. iOS 27 stops waiting for businesses to catch up.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Logo, Text
Apple

If you’ve ever stared at a paper loyalty card and wished your iPhone could just store it digitally, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has dropped a key update for you. Apple is developing a “Create a Pass” feature for the Wallet app as part of the iOS 27 update. 

The feature will let users build and digitize their own passes directly on their iPhones without waiting for businesses to add official Wallet support. 

What can you actually do with the new Wallet feature?

Per the report, the feature covers the passes that matter the most in daily life. These include digital tickets, reward cards, gift cards, and other membership passes (likely gym, libraries, etc.). 

Recommended Videos

You should be able to access it via two entry points. First, the “+” button in the Wallet app, and second, through the page where the credit cards are normally added. Once inside, the interface prompts users to “create passes for tickets, memberships, gift cards, and more.”

You can either build a pass from scratch or point your iPhone camera at a QR code and generate a custom digital pass. The feature is specifically designed for situations where a service provides a QR code for entry but hasn’t implemented native Apple Wallet support. 

This is not the first time we’re hearing about it

Further, you should also be able to use the customization tools to adjust styles, images, colors, and text fields to tailor what each pass displays. For now, the company is testing three template options: Standard (orange) as the default, Membership (blue) for gyms and access-based venues, and Event (purple) for games, movies, and other ticketed occasions. 

Back in April 2026, Apple’s own back-end code referenced a feature for converting physical passes into digital Wallet entries. Gurman’s latest report now reveals more details about it, including the name and the color-coded system. 

It’s worth noting here that Google Wallet has offered the user-generated pass support for quite some time. In addition, several third-party tools allow users to digitize their physical passes into digital ones that can be stored on iPhones. Apple is just closing the gap to bring parity and address the user demand. 

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
iOS 26.5 adding encryption to RCS messages exchanged between Androids and iPhones
Encrypted RCS is arriving in Apple Messages, giving iPhone and Android chats a long-awaited privacy boost
RCS-messaging-on-iOS

Apple is adding encrypted RCS to messages exchanged between iPhone and Android users with iOS 26.5, but the useful detail is what you’ll see when protection is actually active.

The support is in the iOS 26.5 release candidate for developers and public testers, where Apple lists it as a beta. That matters because access depends on supported carriers and a gradual rollout, so installing the update won’t automatically mean every cross-platform chat is protected.

Read more
Metalenz’s new face scan tech lives under the phone display and doesn’t need ugly cutouts
Face ID under the display is finally real, and it's not from Apple.
Metalenz Polar ID

Face ID under the display is finally real, and it's not from Apple. Metalenz has developed the technology that lets facial recognition work from under the display. 

The notch. The punch-hole cutout. The Dynamic Island. Every phone maker has a different name for it, but they all share the same problem. There’s a big chunk cut out of your display to make the facial recognition work. Metalenz might have just solved that.

Read more
Samsung’s next-gen display can measure heart rate and blood pressure through your fingertip
Forget the smartwatch, your phone screen might soon track your vitals.
Samsung Display Booth at Display Summit

Samsung is always pushing the boundaries of what a display could do. Earlier this year, the company released its flagship Galaxy S26 Ultra with a Privacy Display that turns off wide-angle pixels, limiting the viewing angle so no one can snoop on your phone. 

Now, the company has showcased a display technology that could make your next smartphone a surprisingly capable health monitoring device. At Display Week 2026 in Los Angeles, the company unveiled its latest Sensor OLED Display, a 6.8-inch panel that integrates health sensors directly into the display itself. 

Read more