How To Recover Deleted Messages On iPhone | Get Texts Back

Deleted iPhone texts can often be restored from Messages’ Recently Deleted list or by rolling back to a backup made before they were removed.

One minute you’re cleaning up your inbox, the next you’ve erased the one thread you needed. A pickup address. A Wi-Fi password. A two-factor code. It happens fast, and it stings.

The upside: message recovery on iPhone is often possible when you act early and pick the right method. This article starts with the easiest built-in restore, then moves to backup restores when the built-in option can’t help. You’ll also get a short prevention setup at the end so this doesn’t turn into a repeat problem.

What To Do In The First Five Minutes

Before you tap around, take a breath and do a quick reset. These steps keep your odds high.

  • Stop deleting threads. Extra changes can overwrite message records.
  • Pause heavy phone activity. Big downloads, long video recordings, and system updates add churn to storage.
  • Stay on Wi-Fi and power. If you plan to restore from a backup, you’ll want a stable setup anyway.
  • Check every Apple device you use. If you also text from an iPad or Mac, the thread may still sit there.
  • Confirm your iOS version. Messages’ Recently Deleted view needs iOS 16 or later.

Recover Deleted iPhone Messages Using The Recently Deleted View

If you deleted the conversation within the last 30 days and you’re on iOS 16+, start here. It’s the cleanest method because it restores the thread without resetting your phone.

Open Recently Deleted In Messages

Open Messages and stay on the main conversation list (not inside a chat). Near the top, tap Filters or Edit (the label changes by iOS version). Then open Recently Deleted or Show Recently Deleted.

Restore Only The Threads You Need

Select the conversations that contain the missing texts. Tap Recover, then confirm. The restored threads return to your main list.

Common Reasons You Don’t See It

If the Recently Deleted option isn’t visible, one of these is usually the cause:

  • Your iPhone runs iOS 15 or earlier.
  • No conversations were deleted after you moved to iOS 16+.
  • You’re inside a conversation, not on the conversation list screen.
  • Your Messages view is set to a filtered list, not the full list.

What “30 Days” Means In Real Life

The countdown starts from the moment a conversation is deleted. If it’s day 29, you still have a shot. If it’s day 31, Messages won’t keep it in that list. If you’re close to the limit, restore the thread first, then clean things up later.

How Message Recovery From Backups Works

When Recently Deleted can’t help, the next method is restoring an iPhone backup made before the deletion. This trips people up because a restore isn’t a “blend” operation. You’re placing your iPhone back at a previous snapshot.

So you’ll be balancing convenience and disruption:

  • Lowest disruption: Recently Deleted (when it’s available).
  • Highest chance for older deletions: restore the newest backup that’s still older than the deletion.

Before you commit to a restore, do a simple timeline check. Ask: “When did I delete the thread?” Then pick a backup dated before that moment. If your newest backup is dated after the deletion, it won’t contain what you need.

If you want Apple’s full restore steps for iCloud and computer backups, use this official walkthrough: “Restore your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch from a backup”.

Restore Messages From An iCloud Backup

If you back up to iCloud, you can restore directly on the iPhone. This works well when your backup routine is steady and the missing thread existed at the time of the backup.

Check Your Backup Date First

Go to Settings > Your Name > iCloud > iCloud Backup. Look at the last successful backup time. If it’s newer than the deletion, you’ll need an older backup to get the deleted thread back.

Save Anything New That You Can’t Lose

A restore rolls your phone back. That can remove newer photos, notes, and files created after the backup date. If you have recent items you can’t re-create, copy them out first. Move files to iCloud Drive, AirDrop to a computer, or sync photos to a computer app you already use.

Erase Then Restore

Go to Settings > General > Transfer Or Reset iPhone > Erase All Content And Settings. After your iPhone restarts, follow setup until you reach Apps & Data. Choose Restore From iCloud Backup, sign in, and pick a backup dated before the deletion.

Wait For Messages To Finish Syncing

After setup, Messages may populate in stages. Keep the iPhone on Wi-Fi and power. Then search for the contact name, a street name, or a phrase you recall from the thread. If the restore included the thread, it should appear after the message database finishes loading.

Restore Messages From A Mac Or PC Backup

If you back up to a computer, you can restore from Finder (Mac) or from the Apple Devices app / iTunes (Windows). This is a strong option when iCloud Backup is off or when your iCloud storage ran out.

Find A Backup Old Enough To Contain The Thread

Connect your iPhone with a cable. On Mac, open Finder and select your iPhone in the sidebar. On Windows, open Apple Devices or iTunes and select your iPhone. Look at the backup date. Choose one that’s older than the deletion.

Restore The Backup And Keep The Cable Connected

Click Restore Backup, confirm, and leave the iPhone connected until it finishes. If the backup is encrypted, enter the encryption password when asked. Encrypted backups typically include more account data than non-encrypted ones.

Fixes When Your Computer Can’t See The iPhone

If the restore button is greyed out or your iPhone doesn’t show up, run through these quick checks:

  • Unlock the iPhone and accept the “Trust” prompt.
  • Try a different USB port and a known-good cable.
  • Restart the iPhone and restart the computer app you’re using.
  • On Windows, update the Apple Devices app or iTunes, then reconnect.

Method Comparison Table For Recovering Deleted iPhone Texts

Use this table to pick the least disruptive method that still has a realistic chance of bringing the thread back.

Recovery Method Works When Main Trade-Off
Messages Recently Deleted Deleted within 30 days on iOS 16+ No phone reset; limited to recent deletions
Restore iCloud Backup Backup exists from before deletion Replaces current data with a backup snapshot
Restore Computer Backup Backup on Mac/PC from before deletion Needs a computer; replaces current data
Check Another Apple Device Thread still present on iPad/Mac Sync may remove it from all devices
Search Shared Content You need a photo, link, or file from the chat May recover media only, not the whole thread
Carrier Account Records You need SMS dates/times, not iMessage bodies Rarely includes full message text
Ask The Other Person The other person still has the thread Relies on them; not instant
Third-Party Recovery Tools No backups and Recently Deleted expired Mixed results; gives deep access to device data

Extra Places Messages Can Hide

Sometimes the thread isn’t deleted. It’s filtered, muted, or sitting under a view you don’t check often.

Use Search With A Distinct Word

In Messages, pull down to reveal the search field. Search with a distinct word from the thread, like a street name, a restaurant name, or a last name. Group chats can be tricky, so a distinct word often beats searching by contact name.

Check Filtered Views

If you use Filters, switch between views and scan the lists. Threads from short codes, new numbers, or unknown senders can land away from your main view.

Look In Shared Content

If what you lost is a photo, voice note, or link, open any remaining conversation with that contact, tap the contact name at the top, then browse shared content. A thread can be gone while a shared photo still exists in that media list.

Follow Apple’s Menu Path For Retrieving Deleted Texts

If your menu labels don’t match what you see in screenshots online, stick to Apple’s own menu wording for your iOS version: “Recover deleted text messages on your iPhone or iPad”.

Set Up A Safety Net So This Doesn’t Happen Again

Once you’ve recovered what you can, lock in a backup habit that fits your routine. You don’t need a complicated setup. You just need something that runs when you forget about it.

Let iCloud Backup Run Overnight

iCloud Backup usually runs when your iPhone is on power, on Wi-Fi, and idle. The easiest habit is charging overnight on Wi-Fi. Then your phone backs up quietly in the background.

Use Encrypted Computer Backups If You Already Own A Laptop

If you plug your iPhone into a computer now and then, encrypted backups add a second copy outside the cloud. Store the encryption password in a password manager so it doesn’t vanish when you need it most.

Be Careful With Multi-Device Messages

If you text from iPhone, iPad, and Mac, deletions can sync across devices. If you notice an accidental deletion, check another device right away. If the thread is still there, avoid opening Messages settings and toggling sync options until you’ve restored what you need.

Quick Checklist Before You Restore A Backup

Restoring can bring back the missing thread, but it can also roll back other things. Run this checklist so you don’t regret the restore.

Check What To Look For Next Step
Deletion timing When you removed the thread Pick a backup dated before that time
Backup location iCloud, computer, or both Choose the oldest usable backup with the thread
New photos and files Items created after the backup date Copy out what you can’t lose before restoring
Account access Apps tied to this iPhone for login codes Log into accounts and verify access first
Encrypted backup password Password for encrypted computer backups Find it before you start the restore
Stable power and Wi-Fi Charging and a steady network Keep the phone plugged in until it finishes

When Recovery Doesn’t Work And What Still Helps

If Recently Deleted is empty and you don’t have a backup from before the deletion, full recovery may not be possible. At that point, shift your attention to what you can still rebuild fast.

  • Ask the other person for a screenshot or copied text. It’s not fancy, but it can save the day.
  • Pull details from shared media lists. Links, photos, and files can preserve the details you need.
  • Reconstruct the plan from other apps. Calendar events, email receipts, Maps history, and Notes can fill in gaps.

If you’re tempted by third-party recovery tools, treat it like handing over your phone’s contents. Read permissions, read the data handling terms, and avoid anything that asks for your Apple ID password. Tools that promise instant recovery with no limits deserve skepticism.

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