Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. How tos

How to edit and unsend messages on your iPhone with iOS 17

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple Messages icon on iPhone display.
Digital Trends

Apple has been consistently focusing on enhancing its messaging service, iMessage, with each iOS update. In iOS 16 and iOS 17, the company introduced several new features to the platform — including the ability to edit and unsend messages. These two functionalities have been highly beneficial for users, especially those who tend to make typos while typing.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • An iPhone with iOS 16 or iOS 17

  • The Messages app

  • A contact who also has iOS 16 or iOS 17

Notably, Apple limits the ability to edit and unsend messages to 15 minutes, which is ample time to make use of the two features. However, if you have a friend with an Android phone, you’ll be out of luck as these features are limited iMessage (aka other people with an iPhone).

With that out of the way, here’s how you can edit and unsend messages with iMessage in iOS 17.

How to edit a message in iOS 17

You've probably had instances where you sent a message with a typo and had to send another message to correct that typo. That might be a two-step process for you, but if you're anything like us, you’ll probably have to send a third message to correct typos in the first two messages.

Thanks to iOS 17, you can edit that typo within the message itself. Here’s how.

Step 1: Open the Messages app.

Step 2: Select an existing conversation or begin a new one.

Step 3: Type your message and send it.

Screenshots showing how to send a message in iMessage   on iPhone.
Digital Trends

Step 4: Select and hold the message to reveal a pop-up menu.

Step 5: Tap Edit.

Step 6: You’ll get the option to type out the message again. Make any necessary edits.

Editing a message in iMessage in iOS 17.
Digital Trends

Step 7: Tap the blue checkmark.

Like Telegram, iMessage will notify you by showing an "Edited" mark underneath the message you just edited. However, it must be noted that for the changes to show up, the recipient needs to also be on iOS 16 or iOS 17. If you edit a message sent to someone using iOS 15 or older, they'll see the edited message as a separate message.

How to unsend a message in iOS 17

There are also times when you might send a message in the wrong group chat. For situations like these, iOS 17 lets you unsend such messages within 15 minutes of sending.

Step 1: Open the Messages app.

Step 2: Select an existing conversation or begin a new one.

Step 3: Type your message and send.

Screenshots showing how to send a message in iMessage on iPhone.
Digital Trends

Step 4: Select and hold the message to reveal a pop-up menu.

Step 5: Tap More.

Step 6: Choose the delete icon at the bottom left of the screen.

Deleting a message in iMessage in iOS 17.
Digital Trends

Step 7: Choose Delete Message.

Upon doing this, the message will disappear. The recipient will see a status message to show that a message was unsent by the sender. Again, this only happens if the person you're talking to also has iOS 16 or iOS 17. If the user on the other end is running an older iOS version, the message won’t be unsent for them.

Prakhar Khanna
Prakhar Khanna is an independent consumer tech journalist. He contributes to Digital Trends' Mobile section with features and…
I used to dread moving files between devices — now I barely think about it
Android Quick Share with iPhone AirDrop

The kind of work I do involves constant file sharing, and with iPhones, Android phones, and a MacBook all part of my daily rotation, moving files between them used to be far more exhausting than it should have been. Something as simple as getting a photo or video from an Android phone onto my MacBook often turned into a mini process of its own. Most of the time, I had to upload files to Google Drive, wait for them to sync properly, and then download them again on the other device. It sounds manageable when you describe it once, but when you repeat that cycle several times a day, it starts feeling like a tax you pay with your time and patience.

This was mostly the result of ecosystems spending years building walls around themselves. Apple’s walls were obviously the tallest, but Android had its own barriers too. For the longest time, it felt like nobody was particularly interested in making these devices cooperate gracefully. But somewhere along the way, that started changing. And honestly, the difference it has made to my everyday workflow is much bigger than I expected.

Read more
Apple could deliver automatic tab groups in Safari for iOS 27 and macOS
AI-powered tab organization is reportedly on the way.
Apple iPhone in Hand Use

Safari might finally be getting a feature that every tab hoarder secretly needs. And yes, Apple is apparently using AI to clean up the mess.

Could Safari in iOS 27 finally organize your chaotic tabs automatically?

Read more
The iPhone Air shows why compact phones are still the better answer
Ultra-thin phones are cool, but compact phones solve the real problem
iPhone Air in hand

I get the appeal of super slim phones like the iPhone Air and Galaxy S25 Edge. The moment you pick them up, the device feels immediately distinct from a typical smartphone. The iPhone Air is ridiculously thin at 5.64mm, which weighs just 165 grams, and still gives you a reasonably large 6.5-inch OLED display with ProMotion.

For its size, Apple gets the comfort part right. Many smartphones in general are becoming tiring in a very specific way. They are either too tall, camera-heavy, or get too heavy to use for longer stretches with one hand. The iPhone Air manages to cut down on this fatigue by not only slimming down, but also shedding some of that weight.

Read more