how to get water out of your iphone
If your iPhone got wet, focus on drying it safely and avoiding anything that can push water deeper or cause a short circuit.
Quick Scoop
- Turn it off immediately and unplug any cables.
- Do not charge it, blow hot air on it, or shake it hard.
- Gently dry the outside, then let it sit and drain with patience.
- Use sound/vibration âwater ejectâ only for the speaker area, and only after basic drying.
Step 1: Right-now emergency moves
- Turn the iPhone off.
- Hold the power button and slide to power off.
- If it keeps restarting or glitching, leave it off and donât try to âtestâ it every minute.
- Disconnect everything.
- Unplug Lightning/USBâC cables, headphones, and accessories.
- If you see a âLiquid detected in Lightning/USBâC connectorâ alert, obey it and disconnect.
- Gently dry the outside.
- Use a soft, lintâfree or microfiber cloth to dab off water from screen, frame, and back.
* Avoid pressing too hard around speaker grilles, microphones, or ports so you donât push water inside.
- Position the phone to drain.
- Hold or prop it with the speaker/port facing down , so gravity helps water exit, not go deeper.
* You can lightly tap it against your palm or a cloth with the speaker end down to encourage drips out (no hard shaking).
Step 2: How to get water out of speakers and ports
Once youâve dried the outside and the phone has rested for a bit, you can target the speaker and port.
For the speaker (muffled sound)
- Let it airâdry first.
- Leave the phone in a dry room (not a bathroom) for a few hours.
- Use a âWater Ejectâ shortcut or tone.
- On iPhone, many people use a Shortcuts automation sometimes called âWater Ejectâ that plays a special lowâfrequency tone to push water out of the speaker holes.
* Run it with the **speaker facing down** onto a cloth or tissue so moisture can drip out.
- Repeat a few times.
- Run the sound more than once if the audio still sounds muffled.
* Follow up by gently tapping the phone (speaker down) against your palm or cloth.
For the charging port
- Wait before charging.
- If the system warns that liquid is detected, donât ignore it; do not plug in a charger.
- Let it dry naturally.
- Keep the phone upright and let the port face down or sideways so water can escape.
* You can use a cool fan blowing gently across the port to speed evaporation, but donât use heat.
- Do NOT put anything inside.
- Avoid cotton swabs, paper towels, toothpicks, or canned air; they can push liquid deeper or damage contacts.
Step 3: Camera and inside moisture
If your camera looks foggy or you see condensation under the lenses:
- Let it rest in a dry, warm (not hot) room.
- Many cases of foggy lenses clear within 24â48 hours once moisture evaporates.
* Remove thick or rubber cases so air can circulate around the phone.
- Avoid âriceâ and ovens.
- Rice doesnât reliably fix water damage, can leave dust particles, and doesnât reach water trapped deep in the phone.
- Ovens, radiators, hair dryers, or direct sun can warp seals and damage the battery and display.
If the fog doesnât improve after a couple of days or you see actual water under the glass, itâs safer to have a technician open and clean the device internally.
What NOT to do (common myths)
- Donât use a hair dryer or heat gun.
- Hot air can push moisture deeper and damage seals, adhesive, or the battery.
- Donât shake the phone violently.
- Vigorous shaking can spread water further into the device.
- Donât rely on rice.
- Itâs slow, not very effective compared with airflow or silica gel, and introduces dust.
- Donât keep turning it on to âcheck.â
- Powering on and off repeatedly while water is inside increases the risk of short circuits.
When to get help
Consider professional repair or an Appleâauthorized service center if:
- The iPhone wonât turn on at all after 24â48 hours.
- Audio stays very quiet or distorted even after soundâbased waterâeject attempts and drying.
- The camera remains foggy or shows water spots days later.
- You notice overheating, swollen battery, or corrosion around ports or buttons.
Water resistance (the IP rating Apple lists) helps with splashes and brief immersion, but it doesnât guarantee that your iPhone will survive every water incident, especially over time as seals age.
Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.
If you tell me exactly what happened (dropped in pool, rain, shower, how long in water, current symptoms), I can tailor the steps more specifically to your situation.