
Credit: Ryan Haines / Android Authority
TL;DR
- Apple has reintroduced end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for RCS conversations with Android users in the iOS 26.5 developer beta, preventing third parties from reading cross-platform texts.
- The feature includes a toggle in the Messages settings that is reportedly enabled by default.
- While the feature was omitted from the stable iOS 26.4 release, its appearance in the new beta suggests a public launch is approaching.
iPhone-Android text messaging is long overdue for a security upgrade: End-to-end encryption (E2EE). Apple finally began testing end-to-end encryption in iOS 26.4 developer beta, but restricted it to iPhone-to-iPhone conversations only. iOS 26.4 beta 2 expanded it to Android conversations, but the stable release didn’t ship with the feature. With the latest iOS 26.5 developer beta, Android users can once again join in.
The latest iOS 26.5 developer beta once again includes a toggle for end-to-end encryption in the Messages’ settings submenu, as reported by 9to5Mac. This toggle is said to be enabled by default and remains active for conversations with Android users as well.
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