TikTok’s future in the U.S. remains uncertain, especially with reports that the Chinese government might trash stateside plans for a deal. And while DeepSeek has clouded the situation, the risk of a longer or permanent TikTok ban has not gone. Now with the app still unavailable in U.S. app stores, a new warning has just hit users — TikTok may automatically delete on your iPhone unless you change your settings.
The warning comes by way of a TikTok video — what else. And it points out that a little known iPhone feature may do what the U.S. ban failed to do, removing TikTok from your phone with no way to get it back unless and until its U.S. business is sold.
“When you’re low on storage,” Apple says, “you can have iPhone automatically remove unused apps.” This works by way of the App Offload function, which is accessed within the App Store’s settings menu. This deletes “unused” apps, albeit the app’s data stored on your phone will remain. “Reinstalling the app will reinstate your data,” Apple says. But clearly that doesn’t work with TikTok, which can’t be reinstalled.
You can access the setting by either searching for App Offload in your home screen and then clicking “App Store” next to the Settings icon, or just navigating through to it. If you’re not a regular TikTok user but want to keep the app, toggle the setting off.
To be fair to Apple, it does note that the offload and reinstating process only works “if the app is still available in the App Store.” It didn’t have the bizarre TikTok situation in mind when it penned this, but even so it’s very apt now.
It’s worth nothing that if your iPhone is not short of storage or if you regularly use TikTok, this isn’t a risk you need to worry about. But I hear constant moans about a lack of storage as low-capacity iPhones cause problems. There are also no details about what qualifies an app to be deemed “unused” and offloaded — it’s a mystery.
Meanwhile, the TikTok furor is being overtaken by wider events as DeepSeek starts to incur its own bans and restrictions, both in the U.S. and beyond. As I’ve commented before, this likely muddies the arguments for TikTok’s own ban given that DeepSeek admits sending user data to China in a way TikTok does not. But this is a politics issue, not a technical or security issue. And on that note, there’s little sign of a change.