Apple · Filed Mar 3, 2026 · Published Jul 9, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Apple Patents a Clearer Way to Show Which Phone Number You're Using

If you've ever accidentally called someone from your work number when you meant to use your personal one, Apple is apparently thinking about you. A new patent filing describes an iPhone interface that makes it impossible to miss which phone number is active at any given moment.

Apple Patent: Managing Two Phone Numbers on One iPhone — figure from US 2026/0197257 A1
Figure from the official USPTO publication.
See all 194 drawings from this filing ↓
Publication number US 2026/0197257 A1
Applicant Apple Inc.
Filing date Mar 3, 2026
Publication date Jul 9, 2026
Inventors Vitalii KRAMAR, Marcel VAN OS, Patrick L. COFFMAN, Eric Lance WILSON
CPC classification 715/752
Grant likelihood Medium
Examiner CENTRAL, DOCKET (Art Unit OPAP)
Status Docketed New Case - Ready for Examination (Apr 3, 2026)
Parent application is a Continuation of 17230574 (filed 2021-04-14)
Document 6 claims

What Apple's dual-number status display actually does

Imagine you have two phone numbers on your iPhone, one personal and one for work. Right now, it can be easy to lose track of which number you're about to call or text from, especially if a contact is only tied to one of them.

Apple's patent describes a system where both phone numbers each have their own visible status indicator on screen at all times. When you go to call or message a contact who is linked to your personal number, the screen automatically dims or marks your work number as inactive, so you can see at a glance exactly which line is handling that conversation.

The patent also covers alerts for when a SIM or eSIM is removed, and settings screens for managing each number. It even covers a scenario where a second phone number becomes available only when your iPhone is connected to another Apple device, like a paired iPad or Mac.

How the interface tracks and switches active line indicators

The patent describes a set of on-screen indicators that track the active or inactive status of two cellular identifiers simultaneously. A cellular identifier is essentially a phone number or SIM line, either a physical SIM card or a digital eSIM profile stored on the device.

The core mechanic works like this:

  • Both phone numbers display their own status indicator on screen at the same time.
  • When you initiate a call or message to a contact linked to one specific number, the indicator for the other number updates to show it is inactive for that interaction.
  • This status change is contextual, meaning it responds to the contact you're reaching out to, not a manual toggle you have to remember to flip.

The patent also covers a secondary scenario where a second cellular identifier only becomes accessible when the iPhone is paired or connected to another device. This hints at a system where, say, a Mac or iPad could share or relay a phone number to your iPhone under the right conditions.

Additional claims cover alerts when a SIM is removed from the device, and dedicated settings screens for configuring how each line behaves across calls, texts, and data.

What this means for iPhone dual-SIM and eSIM users

Dual-SIM iPhones have existed since the iPhone XS in 2018, but the software experience has always lagged behind the hardware capability. Many users find it genuinely confusing to track which number is active for a given contact, and Apple's own interfaces have historically buried that information in settings menus rather than surfacing it in the moment it matters: right before you hit call.

If this design makes it into a future iOS release, it would be a direct quality-of-life improvement for anyone who uses an iPhone for both personal and professional calls, travelers who carry a local eSIM alongside their home carrier, or anyone who relies on a second number from an app like Google Voice. The secondary-device pairing angle is also worth watching, as it could tie into Apple's broader push to make your phone number feel like something that travels across all your Apple devices, not just the one in your pocket.

Editorial take

This is genuinely useful, unglamorous UI work. Dual-SIM management on iPhone has been a friction point for years, and Apple is clearly aware of it. Whether this specific design ships or not, the fact that four engineers filed a detailed patent around it suggests the company is taking the problem seriously.

The drawings

194 drawing sheets from US 2026/0197257 A1 · click any drawing to enlarge

Patent filing page

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

Editorial commentary on a publicly published patent application. Not legal advice.