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WhatsApp now works on Apple CarPlay, but there’s a catch

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Apple CarPlay installed in car.
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There was a time when your car was just for driving. Over the years, many things have changed. However, until now, there wasn’t full support for WhatsApp on CarPlay. Now, WhatsApp has officially landed on Apple CarPlay, and it is definitely a big deal for many CarPlay users. 

Your dashboard just got an upgrade

After quietly hanging out in beta for a while (and being spotted by the ever-watchful folks at WABetaInfo), the standalone WhatsApp app for CarPlay is finally here. It arrives as part of the WhatsApp for iOS version 26.13.74 update. The feature is already rolling out across India and other global markets, bringing WhatsApp directly to your car’s infotainment system, as long as your iPhone is plugged in and ready to go.

The CarPlay version of WhatsApp isn’t just a stretched-out version of your phone screen. It’s been rethought for driving, which means fewer distractions. You can view recent chats and call history in neatly separated sections, make WhatsApp calls directly from your car’s dashboard, and reply to messages using voice dictation. That last one is key. Earlier, you had to rely on Siri to read and respond to messages, which worked but not always smoothly. Now, WhatsApp cuts out the extra step, making replies feel more immediate.

Here’s the catch

Before you get too excited, there’s a catch — and it’s a sensible one. You can’t open chat threads directly on the CarPlay screen while driving. If you want to actually read a conversation, you’ll need to stop and check your phone. It’s a deliberate move to reduce distractions, and honestly, it’s hard to argue with that logic. 

If you ask me, this feels like a genuinely well-thought-out update. It knows exactly where to draw the line, keeping distractions in check while still making things conveniently accessible. You can fire off quick replies using voice dictation, take calls without fumbling for your phone, and stay in touch without your eyes leaving the road for too long. It does not try to do everything, and that is precisely why it works. Instead, it focuses on doing the essentials well, just enough to make your everyday drives feel a little more connected, without turning your dashboard into yet another distraction.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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