Resetting network settings on your iPhone does not touch your photos, apps, messages, or any personal files. It clears your saved Wi-Fi passwords, cellular settings, VPN configurations, and Bluetooth connections, then restarts the phone with a clean network slate. If you are dealing with dropped Wi-Fi, a stuck cellular signal, or Bluetooth that refuses to cooperate, this is the fix Apple support agents reach for first, and it takes about a minute.
What Actually Gets Erased (and What Stays Untouched)
The reset wipes four things: every saved Wi-Fi network and password, your cellular APN settings, any VPN profiles you added, and paired Bluetooth devices including AirPods. Your contacts, photos, apps, app data, messages, and Health data stay exactly where they are.
If you have run into AirPods that stopped pairing after an iOS update, this reset often clears whatever corrupted Bluetooth handshake was causing it, since it forces the phone to forget every paired device and start fresh.
How to Reset Network Settings on iPhone
Before you start, write down your Wi-Fi password if you do not already have it saved somewhere else. You will need to re-enter it once the reset finishes.
- Open Settings and tap General
- Scroll down and tap Transfer or Reset iPhone
- Tap Reset
- Choose Reset Network Settings
- Enter your passcode, then confirm
Your phone will restart on its own. When it comes back on, the network settings are back to factory defaults and nothing else has changed.
What You Need to Set Up Again Afterward
Reconnect to your home Wi-Fi by entering the password again. Re-pair AirPods or other Bluetooth accessories by holding them near the phone and following the usual pairing prompt. If you use a VPN app for work or streaming, open it and sign back in so it can rebuild its connection profile.
Cellular data should reconnect on its own within a minute or two. If it does not, toggle Airplane Mode on and off once to force the phone to re-register with your carrier’s network.
When This Fix Actually Helps
Reset network settings when Wi-Fi keeps disconnecting for no clear reason, cellular data won’t load pages even with full signal bars, Bluetooth devices refuse to pair or keep dropping, or a VPN connection fails repeatedly. It also clears out saved networks you no longer trust, similar to how you might remove old device access before selling or handing off an iPhone.
Skip this reset if your issue is really about screen brightness, storage, or battery life. Network settings only touch connectivity, so unrelated problems will not budge. And if you are troubleshooting something location-based, like an app that won’t share your location correctly, check Privacy settings first since that is a separate system from network settings entirely.
Will resetting network settings delete my photos or apps?
No. This reset only affects Wi-Fi passwords, cellular settings, VPN profiles, and Bluetooth pairings. Photos, apps, messages, and all personal data remain untouched.
Do I need my Apple ID password to reset network settings?
No. You only need your device passcode to confirm the reset. Your Apple ID and iCloud login stay signed in throughout the process.
How long does the reset take?
The reset itself takes a few seconds, and the iPhone restarts automatically within about a minute. Reconnecting to Wi-Fi and re-pairing Bluetooth devices afterward usually takes another two or three minutes.

