There’s a very specific kind of frustration only Apple iPhone users understand.
It’s not slow performance.
It’s not battery drain.
It’s that tiny red dot on Settings—staring at you like an unpaid bill you can’t ignore.
You open your phone just to check a message… and boom:
“iOS Update Available.”
Again.
And again.
And again.
At some point, it stops feeling like a feature… and starts feeling like pressure.
So naturally, people start asking:
“Can I just block updates completely?”
Short answer: Yes.
Real answer: It’s complicated—and a little risky.
Let’s break it down in a way nobody on tech blogs really does.
🚫 The Psychology Behind Blocking iPhone Updates
Before we jump into the “how,” let’s talk about the why.
People don’t block updates because they’re lazy.
They block updates because they’ve been burned.
- A new update slows down an older phone
- Battery life suddenly drops
- Apps start crashing
- Or worst of all… the UI changes and ruins muscle memory
So instead of upgrading, users think:
👉 “If it’s working fine, don’t touch it.”
And honestly? That mindset isn’t wrong.
⚙️ The “Official” Way (That Barely Works)
Inside iOS, Apple gives you a polite option:
Settings → General → Software Update → Automatic Updates → OFF
This stops automatic downloads.
But here’s the catch:
- You’ll still get notifications
- The red badge will still haunt you
- The update still waits in the background
It’s like muting someone instead of blocking them.
🧠 The Trick People Use (The tvOS Profile Method)
Now here’s where things get interesting.
There’s a workaround floating around:
👉 Installing a tvOS configuration profile
What it does:
- Your iPhone pretends to be an Apple TV
- Apple servers stop sending iOS updates
- Notifications disappear
- Red dot = gone
Sounds genius, right?
It kind of is.
But also… kind of not.
⚠️ The Truth Nobody Tells You
Let’s be real for a second.
Blocking updates is not some harmless hack. It comes with trade-offs most people ignore.
1. You’re Freezing Your Phone in Time
No updates = no improvements.
- No new features
- No performance tuning
- No bug fixes
Your phone becomes… static.
2. Security Risks (This Is the Big One)
Updates aren’t just cosmetic.
They patch real vulnerabilities.
By blocking updates, you’re basically saying:
👉 “I trust the internet not to exploit my phone.”
That’s… optimistic.
3. Apps Will Eventually Break
Developers move forward. Your phone doesn’t.
At some point:
- Apps stop supporting your iOS version
- Banking apps fail
- Even WhatsApp-type apps may drop support
Now you’re forced to update anyway—just later, and more painfully.
🧪 The Real Reason People Still Do It
Even after knowing the risks, people still block updates.
Why?
Because control feels better than uncertainty.
- You control when your phone changes
- You avoid “surprise slowdowns”
- You keep a stable experience
And honestly, for many users—especially those with older devices—that trade-off feels worth it.
🛠️ If You Still Want to Block Updates (Simplified Reality Version)
Here’s the clean version without the fluff:
- Delete any downloaded update file
- Install a tvOS profile (from a trusted source only)
- Install it via Settings
- Restart your phone
Done. No more update prompts.
But read this again:
👉 Only do this if you understand the risks.
🔄 How to Go Back (When Reality Hits)
At some point, you will want updates again.
To undo everything:
- Go to Settings → General → VPN & Device Management
- Find the tvOS profile
- Remove it
- Restart
Updates will come back like nothing ever happened.
💡 A Smarter Middle Ground (What Most People Should Do)
Instead of blocking updates completely:
✔ Wait 2–4 weeks after release
✔ Let others test it first
✔ Then update when it’s stable
This way you avoid:
- Early bugs
- Performance issues
- Regret
But still stay secure.
🧭 Final Thoughts: Control vs Progress
Blocking updates isn’t about technology.
It’s about trust.
Do you trust:
-
Apple to improve your phone?
OR - Yourself to preserve a “perfect” version of it?
There’s no universal right answer.
But there is a smart answer:
👉 Don’t block updates out of fear.
👉 Block them only if you understand the consequences.
Because sometimes…
That tiny red dot isn’t annoying you.
It’s trying to protect you.