An Apple iOS update will let travellers share their AirTags location with airlines, including Air New Zealand.
When Apple introduced its location-tracking device more than three years ago, it quickly became a favourite among travellers for one major reason: the ability to keep tabs on checked luggage. Now, AirTags are about to get a major update that will help fliers get reunited with their missing bags.
Apple announced a new feature Monday called 鈥淪hare Item Location鈥, providing users the ability to securely communicate an AirTag鈥檚 location to third parties 鈥 including airlines.
Once rolled out as part of an upcoming iOS update, it could alter how missing items are found, retrieved and returned to their owners at airports around the world.
To start, Apple plans to work with 15 airlines globally, including Delta Air Lines and United Airlines in the United States. These carriers will integrate the new shared tracking technology directly into their customer service processes in the coming months.
Locating 鈥渕ishandled鈥 bags 鈥 a catch-all industry term for lost, damaged or delayed 鈥 will look a lot different than today.
鈥淗aving an AirTag was great before, but there was no official policy for getting your bag back even if you could show its location to an airline employee,鈥 said Stella Shon, a consumer travel expert for Upgraded Points. 鈥淭he sharing functionality is a game-changing feature.鈥
Outsmarting the airlines
Apple鈥檚 latest feature solves a major pain point for travelers with AirTags. Too often, passengers with lost bags know more than the airline does 鈥 and can鈥檛 get the carrier to take action.
Dan Adam, a 36-year-old technology professional from San Francisco, was traveling with his parents to Germany when Air Canada lost one of their two suitcases.
鈥淚 had an AirTag inside and knew that it was at the airport, but the airline wouldn鈥檛 let me go behind the counter to get it,鈥 he said.
Adam had to wait until Air Canada processed the missing bag within its internal systems, a painstaking delay of more than a week.
Other travellers have gone to even more extreme measures when faced with a luggage impasse. That鈥檚 included tracking a missing suitcase with US$5000 ($5520) worth of valuables to the home of an airline employee 鈥 or intercepting a vehicle carrying a checked bag (and an AirTag) while vacationing in Italy.
鈥淚 was told by British Airways that my bag was in Venice, but I was tracking it with an AirTag in northern Italy,鈥 said May Lilley, chief marketing officer for Under Canvas. 鈥淚 got my bag back without the help of the airline, and I had to stop a DHL truck to do it.鈥
Fewer lost bags
With Apple鈥檚 鈥淪hare Item Location鈥 feature, airline employees should, in theory, be more empowered to return items to owners.
This would be a major shift, because carriers have been reluctant to adopt third-party tracking devices. German airline Lufthansa even temporarily banned AirTags in 2022 before clarifying its policy and allowing them days later.
In its announcement, Apple said the move will help recover misplaced items 鈥渆asily and securely鈥. The shared location feature is disabled when a traveller is reunited with their item and can be stopped by the owner at any time. It鈥檚 also set to automatically expire after seven days.
Some questions remain, including details on how airlines will integrate this new tech into their lost baggage procedures.
鈥淚n the coming months, Delta Air Lines will begin accepting Find My [Apple鈥檚 tracking service] item locations as part of our customer service for locating mishandled or delayed bags,鈥 Delta told the Washington Post. Several major US carriers are missing from Apple鈥檚 list, including American Airlines and Southwest.
Beyond working with individual airlines, Apple is also partnering with SITA, the company behind a baggage-tracing system used by over 500 airlines and ground handlers at 2800 airports around the world.
Meanwhile, despite multiple luggage meltdowns that have made headlines in recent years, data from the US Department of Transportation has shown fewer items are getting lost overall. US carriers reduced mishandled baggage by 9% from 2022 to 2023.
Still, that鈥檚 not a reassuring stat if you have one of the roughly 270,000 bags that are lost, damaged or delayed every month.
For travellers who anxiously check their suitcases, it鈥檚 time to breathe just a bit easier. That is, as long as you have an AirTag.
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