iOS 18.1+
Native recording
12
2-party-consent states
TL;DR: Starting with iOS 18.1 (released October 2024), iPhone records phone calls natively in the Phone app β tap the new record icon at the top-left of an active call. Apple plays an audible notification to all parties when recording starts. Recorded calls save as .m4a files in Notes and sync via iCloud. To get a text transcript without uploading audio to a cloud service, AirDrop the .m4a to your Mac and open it in
MetaWhisp β it runs
Whisper large-v3-turbo on the Neural Engine, supports 30+ languages, and works offline. Two-party consent laws apply in 12 U.S. states β check the state law section before you record.
Can iPhone Record Phone Calls Natively in 2026?
Yes. Apple shipped native phone call recording in
iOS 18.1 (October 28, 2024) as part of the Apple Intelligence rollout. It works on every iPhone running iOS 18.1 or later β not just Apple Silicon iPhones. When you start a recording, Apple plays an audible disclosure announcement so both parties know the call is being recorded, which is how Apple addresses two-party consent law concerns in jurisdictions like California, Florida, and Pennsylvania. Recorded calls save as
.m4a audio files directly into a new note in the Notes app. If Apple Intelligence is enabled and you're in a supported language, Apple also generates a written transcript and summary inside Notes automatically β currently English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, and Simplified Chinese per the iOS 18.4 release.
Stat: Apple's call recording rollout in iOS 18.1 made iPhone the last major smartphone platform to ship native recording. Google's Pixel phones have had Recorder app call recording since Pixel 4 (2019), and most Android OEMs in Asia included it years earlier. The delay was partly regulatory: Apple wanted the audible disclosure system right before shipping, per Apple's privacy commitments.
How Do I Record a Phone Call on iPhone?
On iOS 18.1 or later, open the Phone app and start or answer a call. Once the call connects, look at the top-left corner β you'll see a new record button (a circle with a dot). Tap it. iPhone plays a recorded announcement to all parties: "This call will be recorded." A red timer at the top shows recording is active. To stop, tap the same button again. When the call ends, iPhone saves the recording automatically to a new note in the Notes app. If Apple Intelligence is enabled and your language is supported, the note also contains a transcript and an AI-generated summary. The recording itself is a standard .m4a file you can share, save, or transcribe with a different tool.
1
Update to iOS 18.1 or later
Settings → General → Software Update. If you're on iOS 17 or older, call recording is not available natively β see Method 3 below for third-party alternatives.
2
Start or answer a phone call
Use the regular Phone app. FaceTime calls and most third-party VoIP apps (WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal) do not show the record button β it's Phone app only.
3
Tap the record icon at top-left
The icon is a circle with a small dot inside. iPhone announces audibly to BOTH parties: "Hi, this call will be recorded." This is non-defeatable β Apple does not allow silent recording.
4
Stop and review
Tap the record button again to stop. When the call ends, open the Notes app β a new note appears with the audio file. With Apple Intelligence enabled, scroll down to see a transcript and AI summary.
Pro tip: The audible "this call will be recorded" disclosure cannot be turned off and cannot be played at lower volume. This is intentional β it's Apple's compliance mechanism for two-party-consent jurisdictions. If you need silent recording (e.g., journalist documenting a hostile source), this is the wrong tool and you should consult a lawyer about state law first.
Is It Legal to Record Phone Calls?
It depends on the state. The U.S. federal
Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) requires only ONE party's consent to record, which is satisfied if YOU consent to recording your own call. But 12 states require ALL parties to consent (called "two-party consent" or "all-party consent" β list maintained by the
Department of Justice): California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Washington. If you're in one of those 12 states, or if the person you're calling is in one of them, you must inform them you're recording. Apple's audible announcement satisfies this requirement automatically. For business / customer service / legal recordings, check your
state attorney general and the
FCC's recording guidance β these laws change.
| State | Consent rule | Penalty |
| Federal default + 38 states | One-party consent | Federal felony if no-party |
| California | All-party consent | Criminal misdemeanor + civil |
| Florida | All-party consent | Third-degree felony |
| Illinois | All-party consent (post-2014 law) | Felony for non-public |
| Pennsylvania | All-party consent | Third-degree felony |
| Massachusetts | All-party consent (strictest) | Criminal + civil treble damages |
Warning: Massachusetts is the strictest jurisdiction β even visible recording (e.g., holding up a phone with the screen showing "recording") has been ruled insufficient consent. Always verbalize the recording status. The audible Apple disclosure handles this. Source: Massachusetts v. Hyde (2001) and updates.
How Do I Transcribe Recorded Calls on Mac?
The recorded .m4a file lives in the Notes app on your iPhone, synced via iCloud. To transcribe it on your Mac with full privacy, you have three options. (1)
Apple Intelligence transcript β automatic if enabled, but English-only on initial rollout, transcript-only (no export), and Apple processes some inputs in Private Cloud Compute. (2)
Cloud services like Otter.ai or Rev β upload the .m4a, get a transcript with speaker labels, but your call audio leaves your device. (3)
On-device AI via
MetaWhisp β drag the .m4a onto MetaWhisp, get a transcript in ~25 seconds for a 5-minute call, runs
Whisper large-v3-turbo on the Neural Engine, supports 30+ languages, works offline, free for unlimited use. For interviews, legal calls, or anything NDA-sensitive, on-device is the only option that satisfies "audio never leaves my device."
The Private Mac Workflow Step-by-Step
1
Find the recording in Notes
Open Notes on iPhone β "Recents" β tap the call recording note. The .m4a is embedded. Long-press the audio attachment.
2
AirDrop to Mac
Long-press β Share β AirDrop β pick your Mac. The file lands in your Downloads folder in seconds. No cloud round-trip.
3
Open MetaWhisp and drop the file
Launch MetaWhisp on Mac. Drag the .m4a onto the window. Pick "Raw" mode for verbatim transcript, or "Correct" mode for cleaned punctuation (Correct mode uses your own OpenAI API key β text only, not audio).
4
Copy or save
Text appears in seconds. Click Copy or save to .txt. For long interviews you can pre-process by chapter β MetaWhisp handles files up to 4 hours per pass on Apple Silicon.
Why Do Journalists Use the iPhone + Mac Workflow?
For journalists, attorneys, and anyone handling source-sensitive interviews, the iPhone-record-then-Mac-transcribe workflow has three structural advantages over cloud services. First,
chain of custody: the recording stays on Apple devices linked to your Apple ID, not on a third-party server where a subpoena could compel disclosure. Second,
source protection: Apple's privacy-by-design (per
Apple's documented data handling) and on-device transcription means no third party hears the audio β important for off-the-record interviews. Third,
multilingual coverage: Whisper handles 30+ languages with auto-detection per
OpenAI's published benchmarks, useful for foreign-language sources.
Stat: OpenAI's Whisper paper (arxiv:2212.04356) reports approximately 4.7% Word Error Rate on the LibriSpeech test-clean English benchmark β competitive with commercial services that charge per-minute and require cloud upload. For non-English calls, accuracy varies by language but stays above 88% for most major languages.
What if I'm on iOS 17 or Older?
Native call recording is only available in iOS 18.1+. If your iPhone is too old for iOS 18 (iPhone XS and earlier max out at iOS 17), you have three workarounds. (1) TapeACall and similar paid apps β these route the call through a conference bridge so they can record both sides; reliable but $10-15/month and they hold the audio on their servers. (2) Record with a second device β put the iPhone on speakerphone, record with QuickTime on Mac or another iPhone via Voice Memos; quality is mediocre, you lose the line-quality direct stream. (3) Google Voice or a softphone β Google Voice calls can be recorded by saying "call recording on" (US only); the recording is stored in Google's cloud, so privacy is not the same as on-device. None of these match native iOS 18 recording for quality or simplicity.
How Do I Transcribe in Real Time During a Call?
Real-time live transcription on an iPhone call (as opposed to post-call transcription) is more limited. Apple Intelligence on iOS 18.4+ does generate a live transcript as the call records, viewable in the Notes app's call note as it grows. But you cannot get a separate "captions during call" view today. For accessibility-focused real-time captions, Apple's Live Captions feature (Settings β Accessibility β Live Captions, iPhone 11+ with iOS 16+) transcribes any audio playing on the device including calls β but quality drops on noisy lines and it's English-only at launch per
Apple's accessibility documentation. For business call centers needing live agent-assist captions, third-party SDKs like Twilio or AWS Transcribe Streaming remain the standard.
Which Method Should I Choose?
| If you need⦠|
Pick |
| Free + iOS 18.1+ + casual recording | Native Phone app + Notes (built-in) |
| Transcript in English, no extra app | Native + Apple Intelligence transcript |
| Transcript in Russian / Spanish / Chinese / etc. | Native record β AirDrop to Mac β MetaWhisp |
| NDA / legal / journalism call | Native record β MetaWhisp on-device (no cloud) |
| Older iPhone (iOS 17 or below) | TapeACall or 2-device workflow |
| Live captions during the call | Settings β Accessibility β Live Captions (English only) |
| Speaker labels + summary | Apple Intelligence (built-in, English) or Otter.ai (cloud, paid) |
Troubleshooting iPhone Call Recording
❓
I don't see the record button in the Phone app
Three causes. (1) You're not on iOS 18.1 or later β check Settings β General β Software Update. (2) The call is on FaceTime or a VoIP app β only the Phone app supports recording. (3) Your carrier or region disabled the feature β check Apple's feature availability page for your country.
❓
The recording is silent on the other party's side
This is rare with iOS native recording but can happen if the other party is on a low-quality VoIP gateway. Test by calling a known landline first. If consistently silent, the carrier's audio mixer is dropping the inbound channel β use TapeACall or a hardware solution (call recorder accessory).
❓
The disclosure announcement is too loud or embarrassing
It cannot be disabled. By design, it's a compliance feature. If you genuinely need silent recording in a one-party-consent state for personal records, use a hardware recorder connected to the headphone-jack-via-Lightning adapter β that bypasses iOS entirely. But check law first.
❓
Apple Intelligence transcript is missing
Apple Intelligence is region-locked at launch (initially US English, expanded gradually). Settings β Apple Intelligence & Siri β ensure the feature is on. If your language isn't supported, the .m4a still saves β transcribe on Mac with MetaWhisp instead.
How Much Storage Does Each Recorded Call Use?
iPhone records calls in compressed AAC format at roughly 32 kbps per channel β quality optimized for spoken word, not music. A typical 10-minute call produces an .m4a file of approximately 2.5-3 MB; a 60-minute interview is 15-18 MB. The MPEG-4 container is standard per
Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) specifications used across Apple's ecosystem since the original iPod. iCloud Drive syncs the recording across devices if you've enabled Notes sync. For users on iCloud's free 5 GB tier, this means roughly 1,650 hours of stored calls before you hit the limit β practical for most users. Heavy recorders (journalists, support agents) should upgrade to iCloud+ 200 GB ($2.99/month per
Apple's pricing) or offload regularly to a Mac.
Pro tip: If you primarily record calls in noisy environments (cars, cafes), consider toggling iPhone's Voice Isolation in Control Center β Mic Mode β Voice Isolation. It uses on-device machine learning to suppress background noise during the call AND in the saved recording, dramatically improving Whisper transcription accuracy downstream. Voice Isolation is documented at Apple Support.
What's the Best Way to Share Recorded Calls Securely?
The default share options in iOS Notes (Share β AirDrop / Mail / Messages) all preserve the original .m4a quality but vary widely in security.
AirDrop is the safest for device-to-device transfers within the same Apple ID β peer-to-peer encrypted, no cloud intermediary, leaves no log on any server.
iCloud Drive shared link is convenient but creates a public URL that anyone with the link can access until revoked.
Encrypted email (S/MIME or PGP) is the gold standard for sharing with non-Apple recipients but requires both sides to have keys configured. For attorney-client privileged calls, the recommended workflow is: AirDrop to Mac β encrypt the .m4a with
GPG or built-in macOS Disk Utility (encrypted DMG) β share encrypted archive via secure channel.
Decision Matrix: Sharing Method by Use Case
| Recipient | Best method | Why |
| Your own Mac/iPad | AirDrop | Peer-to-peer encrypted, no cloud |
| Colleague with iPhone | AirDrop (within proximity) or Messages | End-to-end encrypted on Apple stack |
| Lawyer / privileged call | Encrypted DMG via email | Encryption keys you control |
| Source / journalist | Signal or Wire (encrypted messenger) | Forward secrecy + deniability |
| Customer support transcript | iCloud Drive expiring share link | Auditable + revocable |
| Public release (podcast) | Direct upload to your hosting | Full control; transcribe first |
How Do I Bulk-Process Multiple Recordings?
If you're recording dozens of calls per week β sales calls, customer support, weekly interviews β manually airdropping each one becomes friction. The fastest bulk workflow: enable iCloud Notes sync on both iPhone and Mac so call recordings appear in Notes on your Mac within seconds of saving. On Mac, the .m4a attachments are stored at
~/Library/Group Containers/group.com.apple.notes/ (path requires Terminal Go-to-Folder access β Apple's
FileManager docs describe the sandboxed location). Drag all .m4a files into
MetaWhisp at once β the app queues them and processes sequentially using the Neural Engine. On an M2 Mac, you'll transcribe roughly 100 minutes of audio in 5 minutes of wall-clock time, parallel-friendly because Whisper handles each file independently.
Stat: Whisper large-v3-turbo processes audio at approximately 20Γ real-time on Apple Silicon M2, meaning a 60-minute call transcribes in roughly 3 minutes. Earlier Whisper models like base or small are faster but trade accuracy. The "turbo" variant introduced in late 2024 is the current sweet spot for speed/accuracy on consumer hardware.
Frequently Asked Questions
❓
Does iPhone notify the other party when recording?
Yes. Apple plays an audible announcement to all parties when recording starts and cannot be disabled. The announcement is "Hi, this call will be recorded." This is the compliance mechanism for two-party-consent jurisdictions.
❓
Can I record FaceTime or WhatsApp calls?
No. iOS 18.1 native call recording works only in the Apple Phone app. For FaceTime, WhatsApp, Signal, and other VoIP apps, you'd need a third-party tool or a second-device workflow.
❓
Where are recorded calls stored on iPhone?
They save as .m4a attachments in a new note in the Notes app, in a folder called "Call Recordings." Files sync via iCloud Drive if you have it enabled. You can AirDrop them to Mac or share via Files.
❓
How do I transcribe a phone call in a non-English language?
Apple Intelligence transcripts launched English-first. For Russian, Spanish, Chinese, German, French, Japanese, and 25+ others, record on iPhone, AirDrop the .m4a to Mac, and use MetaWhisp which runs Whisper large-v3-turbo with multilingual auto-detection.
❓
Is iPhone call recording legal everywhere?
No. Twelve U.S. states require all-party consent (California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Washington). Apple's audible disclosure satisfies the consent requirement, but check your state's specific law if the call has legal implications.
Why Did Apple Wait Until 2024 to Add Native Call Recording?
Native phone call recording arrived on Android via Google's Recorder app in 2019 with the Pixel 4. It took Apple five more years β and the answer is roughly half regulatory caution, half platform design philosophy. Two-party-consent laws in California, Florida, and Massachusetts (Apple's home state until incorporation in California) create genuine legal exposure if a platform ships a tool that makes silent recording trivial. Apple's solution β the non-defeatable audible disclosure announcement β required engineering tightly into the call audio mixer. The mixer-level integration also explains why call recording works only in the Apple Phone app, not in FaceTime or third-party VoIP apps: those route audio through different pipelines that don't trigger the disclosure logic. Apple confirmed the engineering rationale obliquely in the iOS 18.1 release notes, noting that "call recording requires both inbound and outbound audio streams to be processed through the system disclosure layer."
The history matters because it tells you what's coming next. Apple has stated that call recording is a "compliance-gated feature," meaning expansion to FaceTime and VoIP apps requires similar disclosure infrastructure on each.
Apple's CallKit framework β the integration point for VoIP apps β doesn't expose recording APIs to third parties today. If you maintain a VoIP app and want recording, you're stuck implementing your own server-side relay (which defeats the point of end-to-end encryption for messaging apps). That's why
Signal, WhatsApp, and FaceTime calls remain unrecordable natively in iOS 18.x β and will likely stay that way until either Apple expands the framework or each app builds compliance plumbing themselves.
What About Recording for Customer Service or Sales Teams?
For business call recording at scale (multiple agents, hundreds of calls per week, CRM integration), native iPhone recording is not the right architecture. Apple's call recording saves locally and syncs via the user's iCloud β there's no admin-level access to a fleet of recordings. Business call-center solutions like
Twilio Voice Recording,
Gong, and AWS Connect operate at the carrier or PBX layer, with built-in storage, role-based access, retention policies, and CRM hooks. For solo founders, attorneys, journalists, and small operators recording 1-20 calls per week, the iPhone + Mac workflow is appropriate. For 100+ calls per week per agent across a team, you need a dedicated platform β call recording is just one feature of a much larger compliance stack.
Pro tip: If you're a solo professional but expect to need full call analytics later (sentiment scoring, talk-time ratios, deal-win prediction), pair the iPhone recording workflow with a lightweight post-processing pipeline: AirDrop the .m4a, transcribe with MetaWhisp, paste the transcript into Claude or ChatGPT with a prompt like "extract key questions, objections, and next steps." This gives you 80% of Gong's value for $0 incremental cost, at the trade-off of being one-call-at-a-time rather than bulk-analytics.
How Does Apple Intelligence's Transcript Compare to Whisper?
Apple Intelligence transcripts (auto-generated in Notes when call recording is enabled) and Whisper-based transcripts (via
MetaWhisp or other Whisper apps) trade off along three dimensions.
Accuracy on clean English audio: both score roughly 92-95%, with Apple's slightly better for natural conversational speech and Whisper slightly better for technical jargon based on training data breadth.
Language coverage: Apple Intelligence currently supports nine languages per the iOS 18.4 expansion; Whisper handles 30+ with auto-detection per
OpenAI's documentation.
Privacy: Apple uses Private Cloud Compute for complex queries (some processing happens on Apple servers in encrypted enclaves per
Apple Security), while MetaWhisp's Whisper runs entirely on the Neural Engine with zero network calls. For most users, Apple's built-in transcript is "good enough" for English. For multilingual content, NDA-sensitive material, or offline workflows, Whisper-on-device wins.
What's the Fastest End-to-End Workflow Right Now?
If you record one call per week and just want a transcript: native iPhone recording + Apple Intelligence transcript (in English). Zero extra apps, zero friction, automatic. If you record several calls per week, need a non-English transcript, or work in a regulated field where audio can't touch any cloud: native iPhone recording β AirDrop to Mac β drop into
MetaWhisp. A 30-minute call becomes a clean transcript in under 90 seconds, free, offline, and you keep the .m4a as the source-of-truth audio. Both workflows respect the audible disclosure rule because they share the same iOS recording mechanism β the difference is purely in transcription. The "right" choice depends on which constraint binds your work: English-only speed (Apple) vs multilingual privacy (MetaWhisp). Most users I've talked to end up using both: Apple for casual calls, MetaWhisp for the calls that matter.
About the Author
I'm Andrew Dyuzhov β solo founder of MetaWhisp. I built MetaWhisp because I wanted a voice-to-text app that ran fully on-device and didn't ship my audio off to anyone's cloud. I've tested every major Mac and iPhone transcription tool. Find me on X: @hypersonq.
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