How to Send Voice Notes on iMessage (+ Fix If Not Working)
iMessage voice notes are weirdly hidden. Apple keeps moving the button, and half the features only work between iPhones. Here’s how to actually use them.
How to Send Voice Notes on iMessage
iOS 17 and Later
Apple moved the microphone button in iOS 17. Here’s where it went:
- Open Messages
- Open or start a conversation
- Tap the + button (left of text field)
- Tap Audio
- Tap the red record button
- Speak your message
- Tap Stop, then the blue arrow to send
Why they added an extra step? No idea. Classic Apple.
iOS 16 and Earlier
The old method was simpler:
- Open a conversation in Messages
- Tap and hold the microphone icon (right of text field)
- Speak your message
- Release to send, or swipe left to cancel
You can also:
- Tap the microphone once (don’t hold)
- Record your message
- Tap stop
- Preview, then tap send
Hands-Free Recording
On iOS 17+:
- Tap + → Audio
- Tap and hold the record button, then slide up to lock
- Let go — it keeps recording
- Tap send when done
Great for longer messages.
Preview Before Sending
Nobody wants to accidentally send a rambling, half-finished voice note.
To preview:
- After recording, don’t tap send immediately
- Tap the play button on the recording
- Listen back
- Tap send or X to delete and re-record
On older iOS: Tap (don’t hold) the mic, record, tap stop, then preview appears automatically.
The Blue Bubble Problem
Here’s what Apple doesn’t make clear: voice notes only work between iMessage users.
- Blue bubble = iMessage = voice notes work
- Green bubble = SMS = no voice notes
If you’re texting an Android user, you can’t send voice notes through Messages. Use WhatsApp, Telegram, or another app instead.
How to Check if iMessage is On
Settings → Messages → iMessage (should be green)
If it’s off, turn it on and your blue-bubble contacts can receive voice notes.
iMessage Voice Note Settings
Stop Auto-Delete
The worst default setting: iMessage deletes voice notes 2 minutes after you listen to them.
To fix this:
Settings → Messages → Audio Messages → Expire → Never
Do this right now. You’ll avoid so much frustration.
Raise to Listen
When enabled, raise your phone to your ear to listen to voice notes privately, like a phone call.
Settings → Messages → Raise to Listen (toggle)
Some people love it, others find it triggers accidentally in their pocket.
When Voice Notes Won’t Send
“Why is there no microphone icon?”
On iOS 17+, it’s hidden. Tap the + button first, then look for Audio.
Voice note stuck on “Sending”
- Check internet connection (Wi-Fi or cellular)
- Make sure iMessage is enabled (Settings → Messages → iMessage)
- Try toggling iMessage off and on
- Force quit Messages and try again
Recipient can’t play it
- They might be on Android (green bubble) — doesn’t work
- They might have an older iOS version
- The audio might have expired on their end (check their settings)
Recording won’t start
- Check microphone permission: Settings → Privacy → Microphone → Messages (on)
- Restart your iPhone
- Check if something else is using the microphone (active call, etc.)
Audio sounds terrible
- Don’t cover the bottom microphone
- Reduce background noise
- Some phone cases block the mic — try without
- Connection issues can cause compression artifacts
Limitations You Should Know
iMessage voice notes have some frustrating limitations:
- Apple-only — Green bubble contacts can’t receive them
- Auto-delete — 2-minute default expiration
- No transcription — Can’t convert to text natively (iOS 17+ has limited Siri transcription)
- Hard to find later — No voice note search or filter
- No export — Getting voice notes out of iMessage is tedious
For casual messages between iPhones, it’s fine. For anything beyond that ecosystem, you need alternatives.
Voice Notes That Work With Anyone
Frustrated by the iMessage limitations? We were too.
We built a browser extension that doesn't care what phone the recipient has. Record a voice note, get a link. Share it anywhere — they just click to listen.
No "sorry, you need an iPhone." No hunting through settings. No 2-minute disappearing act.
And everything saves in one place with context — it remembers what webpage you were on when you recorded. Finally, voice notes that make sense months later.
Try it free → Install Chrome ExtensionFAQ
Why can't I send voice notes on iMessage?
Most likely the recipient isn't on iMessage (green bubble = SMS, no voice notes). Or check that iMessage is enabled in Settings → Messages. On iOS 17+, the mic button moved — tap + first to find Audio.
How long can iMessage voice notes be?
No official limit, but Apple recommends under 30 minutes. Very long recordings may fail to send over cellular. For long recordings, use Voice Memos and share the file instead.
Do iMessage voice notes disappear?
By default, yes — after 2 minutes. Change this in Settings → Messages → Audio Messages → Expire → Never. You can also tap "Keep" under any voice note to save it permanently.
Can Android users receive iMessage voice notes?
No. iMessage voice notes only work between Apple devices with iMessage enabled (blue bubbles). For Android contacts, use WhatsApp, Telegram, or a web-based voice note tool.
iMessage voice notes work well within the Apple ecosystem. Once you know where Apple hid the button and change that expiration setting, they’re convenient for iPhone-to-iPhone communication. Just don’t expect them to work outside the blue bubble world.
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