Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster


Apple's AirTag item tracker turns five years old today, with the $29 accessory having spent half a decade as the best-selling item tracker in the world.

Second-Generation-AirTag-Feature.jpg


The AirTag launched on April 30, 2021, alongside the M1 iMac, a new iPad Pro, and a new Apple TV 4K. The coin-shaped accessory has a polished stainless steel back, IP67 water resistance, and a U1 Ultra Wideband chip that powers Precision Finding, a feature that combines haptic, visual, and audio feedback to guide users to a lost item's precise location with the iPhone 11 and later.

Setup works by bringing the tag close to an iPhone, with each AirTag appearing in the Items tab of the Find My app. The Find My network, which relies on Bluetooth signals from nearby Apple devices to relay location data, allows a lost item to be tracked even when out of direct range. The AirTag is priced at $29 for a single tag or $99 for a four-pack, with free engraving available.

Reports of the AirTag being misused for stalking and vehicle theft surfaced within months of launch, with its small size, low price, and the breadth of the Find My network making it an attractive tool for bad actors. Apple released a statement in February 2022 saying incidents of misuse were "rare; however, each instance is one too many," and introduced setup warnings making clear that using an AirTag to track people without consent is a crime in many regions.

A class-action lawsuit filed in California in December 2022, later expanded to include more than three dozen plaintiffs, alleged that the product's accuracy and affordability made it well-suited for misuse, and a federal judge allowed certain claims to move forward in March 2024. Apple and Google later aligned on cross-platform specifications so that Android users receive automatic unwanted tracking alerts alongside iPhone users.

Despite the controversy, Apple says the AirTag became its best-selling item tracking accessory, citing user stories of recovering lost luggage, bicycles, and bags in the years since launch.

Apple released the second-generation AirTag in January 2026. The updated model features a second-generation Ultra Wideband chip with Precision Finding working from up to 50% farther away, an upgraded Bluetooth chip, and a speaker 50% louder than the original. For the first time, Precision Finding also works with Apple Watch Series 9 models and later. A teardown revealed that the speaker magnet is more firmly secured in the second-generation model, making it harder to remove, a modification that had previously been used to silence unwanted tracking alerts. Pricing remains $29 for a single tag and $99 for a four-pack.

Article Link: Apple Launched AirTag 5 Years Ago Today
 
Great product for when you're traveling. Otherwise, mine sit unused most of the time. I wish I could attach one to my sunglasses! 😅
Same here. A couple stashed in bicycles but I can’t say I ever misplace anything important like car keys, house keys, wallet, or anything else.
 
Apple launches Air Tag 5?!?!/jk

Mine have been terribly useful, especially when my luggage got lost when travelling from Denmark to UK. I could poke at the service desk telling them that I can still see the luggage at the airport. Then I noticed them moving. Then they were gone for 8 hours. Then, I could tell they popped up in ORLANDO USA! Extra angry, I could yell even more at the service desk until they found the luggage and sent them straight to my door.

And the AirTag were battery level red the whole time 🙈

Impressive battery life, impressive usage! I wish I could have one in my wedding ring 😅
 
  • Like
Reactions: ThomasJL and k1121j
People don't realize it wasn't actually Apple's invention. They just did a great job integrating it within their iOS ecosystem and marketing it, and I'm pretty sure they got sued for it as well.

I have a set of one of the original bluetooth tracker tabs from probably 8 years ago (about the same size as the airtag) that I recognized were amazing devices.
 
What an interesting coincidence. Today is the first time I found a lost keychain. Now lets see how I get it back to the owner, hoping, he sets it to lost and leaves some information…
 
I waited years for this launch to free me from the disposable and unreliable Tile ecosystem. Since then it's been every bit as good as I had hoped, and save me countless hours looking for my misplaced items, and hundreds of dollars finding lost items I accidentally left out in public.
 
  • Like
Reactions: DocMultimedia
Great product for when you're traveling. Otherwise, mine sit unused most of the time. I wish I could attach one to my sunglasses! 😅
Good idea. They need to make a teeny tiny version. Lol

I barely use mine except when traveling, and one saved me when I misplaced my running shoes the night before a marathon. I always put a tag on those!
 
Great product for when you're traveling. Otherwise, mine sit unused most of the time. I wish I could attach one to my sunglasses! 😅
I have a soft case for my sunglasses, and attached an AirTag; the “notify me when left behind” option is priceless.
 
I don’t use mine to often.

As long as my family gives me a few minutes to put everything in its place after I walk in the door I am good.

But, if I walk into the door and there is an emergency. My stuff, especially my keys, can end up anyplace.
 
I waited years for this launch to free me from the disposable and unreliable Tile ecosystem. Since then it's been every bit as good as I had hoped, and save me countless hours looking for my misplaced items, and hundreds of dollars finding lost items I accidentally left out in public.
The big difference is the Tiles always got corroded and stopped working, the AirTags that I have replaced the batts in were clean inside.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.