iPhone troubleshooting
Why is my iPhone not charging?
The common causes, and the fix for each, easiest first. Most are a five-minute job.
The 30-second version
Try a different wall outlet, swap to a cable you know works, clear any lint out of the charging port, then leave it to charge for a full 30 minutes. That fixes the large majority of cases. Still dead after that? Work down the list below.


SmartGadgetKit may earn a commission if you buy through links to our product guides, at no extra cost to you.
Dirty port
The most common cause. Lint packs into the port and blocks the cable. A gentle clean usually fixes it.
Worn cable
The most overlooked. Cables fail from the inside. A known-good cable rules it out in seconds.
Weak charger
Too little power. A 5W plug or a laptop port may not be enough. Use a proper wall charger.
80% pause
Not a fault. Optimized Battery Charging holds at 80% on purpose to protect the battery.
iPhone not charging? Find your fix
What is it doing?
Start here
Work the basics, then the cable
Plug into a wall outlet (not a laptop or hub), reseat the cable, and clear any lint from the port. If a cable you know is good revives it, the old one is done.
See the best USB-C cables →Start here
Use a proper charger
A 5W plug or a laptop port is often too weak. A real USB-C Power Delivery wall charger fixes most slow charging.
See the best GaN chargers →Start here
Switch the charger and ease off
If it shows charging but the percent does not climb, the charger or cable can barely keep up, especially while you are using the phone. Use a stronger USB-C charger and a good cable, close heavy apps, and restart. A dirty or wet port can fake a connection too.
See the best GaN chargers →Good news
That is normal, not a fault
Optimized Battery Charging holds at 80% to protect the battery, then finishes before you usually unplug. Tap Charge Now on the Lock Screen for a full charge sooner.
Start here
Clean the charging port
If it only charges at an angle, the port is the suspect: lint inside or a worn cable connector. Clear the port gently, then try a known-good cable.
See the best USB-C cables →Start here
Fix the alignment
Plug the pad into power first, centre the phone on it, and take off any thick or metal case, a PopSocket or a card holder. A non-MagSafe phone charges on Qi, just slower.
Important
Dry it before you charge
A liquid or charging-not-available alert means moisture in the port. Unplug, tap the phone gently port-down, and leave it somewhere dry and airy. Retry after 30 minutes, and allow up to a day to dry fully. No rice, no hairdryer. A wireless charger still works once the back is dry.
Start here
Check your battery health
Open Settings, then Battery, then Battery Health and Charging, and read Maximum Capacity (the battery health versus new, not your charge level). Below about 80%, or with a Service message, a replacement restores runtime.
Start here
Check the cable and port
An accessory-not-supported or not-certified alert usually means a dirty port, a damaged or uncertified cable, or moisture, not a broken phone. Clean the port, switch to a certified cable, restart, and update iOS.
See certified USB-C cables →Start here
Clear the software hiccup
Updates can leave a glitch. Restart, then force restart (Volume Up, Volume Down, then hold the Side button until the Apple logo), and install any newer iOS. You can also toggle Optimized Battery Charging off and on in Settings, Battery, Battery Health and Charging.
Start here
Let it cool down
A hot iPhone pauses charging by design. Move it out of the sun or a hot car and off heavy apps, then try again at room temperature.
Tap a symptom to see the fix. No app, no waiting.
iPhone not charging? Work through these fixes in order
These are the fixes for an iPhone not charging, in order, so start at the top and stop the moment it charges again. Every step follows official guidance from Apple Support, from the most common fix to the rarest.
First, rule out the obvious
Plug straight into a wall outlet, reseat the cable at both ends, and give it 30 minutes before you worry. Apple’s first step is to check for firm connections and let the device charge for half an hour. A laptop USB port or a cheap multi-port hub often can’t supply enough power, so go straight to the wall. Try a second outlet in case the first one’s dead. Then watch the status bar closely, because sometimes it’s charging slowly and you couldn’t tell.
Clean the charging port
Lint packed into the port is the single most common reason an iPhone stops charging. Pockets and bags work fluff deep into the port, and once it compacts, the cable can’t make proper contact. Apple advises removing any debris, then plugging the cable firmly back in. The safe way: power the phone off first, then lift the lint out gently with a dry soft brush or a wooden or plastic toothpick. Never use a metal pin, compressed air or any liquid. You’ll be surprised how much comes out.

Try a different cable
Swap to a cable you know is good, because a frayed, kinked or cheap uncertified cable is one of the most frequent causes and the easiest to overlook. Cables fail from the inside, usually near the connector where they bend most, so the damage is often invisible. Apple’s advice is to check the cable for damage and stop using damaged accessories. If a known-good cable brings your iPhone back, your old one’s done.
If yours turns out to be the culprit, our roundup of the best USB-C cables covers ones built to last. Want to know why a cheap cable throttles charging? We break it down in USB-C cables explained.
Use a proper charger
A tiny 5W plug, a laptop port or a powered hub may be too weak, so use a proper USB-C wall charger. A charger and an iPhone negotiate how much power to move between them, and a real USB-C Power Delivery charger gives the phone a clean, adequate supply. If you’ve been topping up from a laptop or an ancient plug, a decent wall charger often fixes it outright. A good GaN charger is small, runs cool, and has the headroom to charge at full speed.

Restart, force restart, and update iOS
A software hang can stop charging dead, so restart, then force restart, then update iOS. A normal restart clears most glitches. If that does nothing, force restart: on iPhone 8 and later, Apple’s sequence is press and quickly release Volume Up, press and quickly release Volume Down, then press and hold the Side button until the Apple logo appears. Once it’s back, make sure you’re on the latest version of iOS, since Apple ships charging fixes in updates.
Is it pausing at 80% on purpose?
If your iPhone charges to 80% and then stops, that’s almost certainly Optimized Battery Charging or Charge Limit doing its job, not a fault. Apple built this in to reduce battery wear by cutting the time your phone sits full. It learns your routine over at least 14 days, then holds at 80% and finishes shortly before you normally unplug. You’ll see a note on the Lock Screen telling you when it’ll be full. Need 100% now? Touch and hold that notification and tap Charge Now.
Check your battery health
Open Settings, then Battery, then Battery Health & Charging, and look at the Maximum Capacity figure. If it has dropped below about 80%, it may be time to replace the battery. That percentage is the battery’s health against when it was new, not your current charge level. Apple designs iPhone 14 and earlier to hold about 80% of their capacity after 500 charge cycles, and iPhone 15 models after 1000 cycles. Once you fall much below 80% you will notice shorter runtime, slower or uneven charging, and sometimes a Service message, so if the phone is a few years old a battery replacement is the likely fix.
MagSafe or wireless charging not working?
Line the charger up centrally, plug the pad into power before you place the phone, and take off any thick or metal case. With MagSafe, magnets pull the charger into the right spot automatically. Remove a leather wallet if you use one. A thick case, a metal case, a PopSocket or a card holder sitting between the phone and the pad will block or slow charging. And if your phone isn’t a MagSafe model, it’ll still charge on a Qi pad, but more slowly.
Let it cool down
An iPhone that’s too hot will pause charging to protect the battery, so move it somewhere cool and try again. A hot car, direct sun, or heavy gaming while charging can all heat it enough to limit charging. Apple designs the iPhone to work best at normal temperatures and to pull back in extreme heat. Let it cool to room temperature and it should pick up where it left off.
When to get it serviced
If you’ve worked through everything above and it still won’t charge, the port or the battery may have failed, and that’s a job for Apple. A physically damaged port or a dead battery needs proper service. Contact Apple or an authorised provider, and back up your data first if the phone still powers on.
Sources: Apple Support, if your iPhone won’t charge; Apple Support, Charge Limit and Optimized Battery Charging; Apple Support, iPhone battery and performance; Apple Support, how to use your MagSafe Charger; Apple Support, liquid-detection alert.
How to stop it happening again
Most cases of an iPhone not charging trace back to the cable, the charger or the port, so a few habits prevent a repeat. Keep a cable you trust rather than the cheapest in the drawer, charge from a proper wall charger, and give the port an occasional gentle clean. And for the times you’re nowhere near a socket, a power bank is the simplest backup there is.
Questions, answered
Why is my iPhone plugged in but not charging?
Why does my iPhone say it’s charging but the battery isn’t going up?
My iPhone stopped charging after an iOS update, what should I do?
Why does my iPhone stop charging at 80%?
Is it safe to use a non-Apple charger?
How do I clean my iPhone charging port?
Why is my iPhone charging so slowly?
Why does my iPhone say Charging On Hold?
Why does my iPhone say liquid detected, or charging not available?
Why does my iPhone say this accessory is not supported?
How do I check my iPhone battery health?
What are the most common iPhone charging issues?
How do I know if it is the charger or the iPhone that is not working?
Why does my iPhone keep stopping and starting charging?
Related reading
Written by people who work with this kit
SmartGadgetKit is an independent team across the UK and Asia, writing for readers in the UK, Europe and Asia. We check guidance against the manufacturer and named sources, we tell you the trade-offs, and we say when we have not tested something ourselves.


On an Android or Samsung phone? See why your phone is not charging for the universal fix list.




