Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Features

Apple’s new iOS 16 lock screen is already better than anything on Android

Add as a preferred source on Google

The opening keynote for WWDC 2022 has come and gone, leaving us with a mountain of updates for iOS, WatchOS, MacOS, and more. Coming off the heels of a relatively modest update with iOS 15 last year, iOS 16 is poised to shake up your iPhone in a few significant ways — the most notable being your lock screen.

The iOS lock screen has had an embarrassing lack of utility for years. It shows your notifications, the current time and date, and has a couple of shortcuts for the camera and flashlight. And that’s it! You can’t change what the lock screen clock looks like, add helpful widgets, or keep the lock screen enabled as an always-on display. These are all things Android has offered for years, thus making the iOS lock screen feel antiquated by comparison.

Recommended Videos

But that’s (mostly) set to change with iOS 16. Along with new features for Apple Maps and iMessage, iOS 16 introduces many new options for the lock screen. Apple calls it the lock screen’s “biggest update ever,” and it’s a bold statement that holds true. There are new customization options and an impressive widget system. It looks sleek, well-executed, and thanks to a few key features, better than anything Android has offered.

 

Huge potential for lock screen widgets

As much as I love what Apple’s doing with lock screen customization in iOS 16, its approach to lock screen widgets has me the most excited. Two years after adding home screen widgets with iOS 14, iOS 16 brings them to the lock screen. Whether you want to edit your lock screen to show the current weather conditions, your Apple Watch’s activity rings, or upcoming calendar appointments, all of that’s possible with iOS 16.

It’s important to note that these aren’t the same widgets you place on your home screen. Instead, they’re part of a new widget design that takes “inspiration from Apple Watch complications.” They’re smaller, more compact, and designed to look like a natural part of your lock screen. How these lock screen widgets will work with third-party apps remains to be seen, but this is an area where Apple’s already put in the work. Developers have been creating Apple Watch complications for years, meaning there’s a vast library of small widgets just waiting to be used on an iOS 16 lock screen. Assuming Apple has a system in place that’ll allow developers to quickly bring their Apple Watch complications to the iOS 16 lock screen, we could see dozens of third-party lock screen widgets ready to go from day one.

iOS 16 lockscreen new look.
Apple

Surprisingly deep customization

And, of course, there’s Apple’s suite of lock screen customization tools. I would have been happy with a couple of clock options and nothing more. But Apple did so much more than that. It offers different clock fonts, customizable colors, and Portrait mode photos that add a subtle 3D effect. You can also have your lock screen automatically shuffle through images throughout the day.

The best part? You can create different lock screens for different Focus modes, allowing you to quickly change your entire lock screen setup on the fly. This is something that’s proven incredibly useful with iOS home screens over the past year, so seeing it expand to the lock screen is fantastic.

Beating Android at its own game

Did Apple invent any of these lock screen features? Not at all. But just like when it added home screen widgets, Apple’s execution of its lock screen changes in iOS 16 looks like what Android phones have been trying to do for years. You can add lock screen widgets on a Samsung Galaxy S22, but you’re limited to a handful of stock widgets with no hope for third-party support. You can also change the clock style and color, but there’s nothing comparable to switching your entire layout with a Focus mode.

This is where Apple has always succeeded with previous versions of iOS. It’s never the first to roll out a new feature, but when it does finally come to the table, it’s usually with something like home screen widgets that was worth the wait. We can’t say with any certainty if that will be true of the iOS 16 lock screen until we’ve used it, but based on what we’ve seen so far, I’m inclined to say Apple (once again) made the right call.

Joe Maring
Joe Maring has been the Section Editor of Digital Trends' Mobile team since June 2022. He leads a team of 13 writers and…
Hate editing videos? This new AI app turns your camera roll into ready-to-post reels
Reelful uses AI to plan, script, and edit your reels, so you never have to touch an editing app.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Your camera roll is probably packed with vacation photos, birthday videos, and random clips that never make it to Instagram or TikTok. If video editing has kept you from posting more on social media, a new app wants to take that job off your plate entirely.

Reelful is an iOS app that uses AI to automatically turn your existing photos and videos into polished, ready-to-post reels for TikTok and Instagram.

Read more
Galaxy Z Fold 8: Everything we know about Samsung’s wider and shorter foldable
Samsung's widest Fold yet could finally make book-style foldables feel natural.
Rear camera for selfie on Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7.

For most of its existence, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold has solved one problem while creating another. The book-style foldable has let buyers carry a tablet-sized screen in their pocket without actually carrying a tablet. But, through no fault of its own, that came at the cost of a cover screen so tall and narrow that using it one-handed felt unnatural and uncomfortable. 

Further, viewing content on the inner screen came with giant black bars at the top and the bottom. Samsung is addressing that with the Galaxy Z Fold 8, which could feature an entirely new form factor. Think shorter, wider, passport-shaped, and a cover screen you can actually type on without contorting your fingers. 

Read more
Google just teased a Pixel 11 feature we have been waiting months to see
Pixel Glow appears beside the cameras in Google’s first Pixel 11 video
Lighting, Appliance, Ceiling Fan

Last week, Google confirmed that its 2026 Made by Google event will take place on August 12. The Pixel 11 series is expected to lead the announcements, alongside the fifth-generation Pixel Watch. Google has now released its first video teaser ahead of the event, and it appears to reveal both the Pixel 11 Pro and the rumored Pixel Glow feature.

What does the teaser reveal?

Read more