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These 7 hidden iOS 27 features have quietly improved my iPhone experience

Forget the big-ticket features. These seven tiny changes are the ones you'll actually feel every day.

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iPhone new timer feature in iOS 27
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends

Every iOS update comes with a few headline features that grab all the attention. But for me, it’s usually the small, unglamorous changes that end up making the biggest difference in my day. iOS 27 is packed with these little wins, and after spending time with the iOS 27 beta, seven of them have already improved my day-to-day experience.

Connectivity Assist keeps me online

If you’ve ever watched a webpage stall while your iPhone stubbornly clings to a weak Wi-Fi signal, you’ll appreciate this one. Apple has added a new Connectivity Assist feature that lets your iPhone automatically switch to cellular data when you are connected to a spotty or weak Wi-Fi network. You can find it in Settings under Wi-Fi.

It ensures your iPhone never loses connectivity, as it will seamlessly switch to cellular data when needed. Keep in mind it can use a bit more mobile data in the background, so if you’re on a limited cellular data plan, you should keep an eye on it. 

Auto-paste suggestion for what you copy

This is the kind of tiny change that makes a considerable improvement in your daily life. Now, whenever I copy a piece of text, the keyboard shows a paste suggestion right above it. Instead of long-pressing the text field and hunting for the paste button, I just tap the suggestion, and it’s done.

It sounds trivial, but I copy and paste things dozens of times a day, from links to addresses to messages, and it makes the whole process feel effortless.

Separate volumes for alarms and ringtones

Until now, your alarm and your ringtone shared the same volume, which meant turning down your ringer at night could leave your morning alarm too quiet to wake you. iOS 27 finally lets you set separate volumes for ring and alarm.

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You can set this up by going to Settings, then Sounds & Haptics, and turning off Match Ringtone Volume. From there, you get independent control over alarms, timers, and system sounds. 

Now I can keep my ringtone low during the day without worrying that my alarm won’t do its job the next morning.

A new connectivity widget size in Control Center

The connectivity widget in Control Center gives you quick access to your Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, cellular data, AirDrop, and other controls. In iOS 26, you could only use this widget in either small or large size. 

If you use the small size, it requires two taps to access controls, while the large size widget takes up the entire page. With the iOS 27 update, you now get a middle ground. To use this, long-press the Control Center to enter edit mode and use the corner drag handle to adjust the size. 

The new widget takes half the page, leaving space for your other controls while ensuring you can use all connectivity toggles with just a single tap. 

Setting a timer just got quicker

You could always add a Control Center toggle to create timers in previous versions of iOS. However, tapping on the toggle would only launch the Clock app, which didn’t make much sense to me. 

With iOS 27, the timer toggle finally functions as it should have from the start. Now, when you tap the toggle, it opens an overlay you can use to quickly create the timer. 

I can swipe left and right to change the time and use the “Set Timer” button to start the timer without opening the app. It’s quick, works well, and lets me set timers without switching apps. 

Dictation got the upgrade it needed

iPhone dictation used to be trash. It had no concept of punctuation or formatting, and it got words wrong so often that fixing the mess took longer than just typing the thing myself. With iOS 27, that has finally changed thanks to the new Advanced Dictation feature.

It’s in preview for now, and you can turn it on by going to Settings → General → Keyboard → Advanced Dictation Preview. It uses a new on-device model that not only makes far fewer mistakes but is also genuinely good at adding punctuation on its own, so you don’t end up with one long run-on sentence. 

If Apple keeps improving it from here, you might not need to pay a hefty subscription for one of those dedicated dictation apps anymore.

AirDrop is shockingly fast now

I left my favorite for last. AirDrop has always been handy, but in iOS 27 it feels like it got a serious shot of espresso. Small files like photos and documents transfer instantly, and large files feel almost twice as quick as before. I am constantly amazed by the new transfer speeds, and I love that it saves a considerable amount of time each day.

These features might not get the limelight, but they are what make iOS 27 worth installing. They smooth out the little annoyances I deal with every day and improve my iPhone experience. That makes these features worth more to me than any single big-ticket feature.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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