Bluetooth Won't Pair — Fix It on iPhone or Android
Bluetooth refusing to pair — or dropping the connection as soon as it's made — is one of the most common phone frustrations. Here are the steps that actually fix it.
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Bluetooth pairing failures nearly always come down to one of three things: the devices can't see each other, a stale pairing is confusing one of them, or the Bluetooth stack on your phone needs a reset. Here's how to tackle each.
Make Sure Both Devices Are in Pairing Mode
Your phone needs to be scanning, and the other device (headphones, speaker, car system, etc.) needs to be discoverable. Most accessories enter pairing mode when you hold the power or Bluetooth button for a few seconds — a flashing light usually confirms it. Check your accessory's manual if you're not sure how to activate it.
Forget and Re-Pair on Your Phone
An old, corrupt pairing entry is a very common culprit.
On iPhone
- Go to Settings → Bluetooth.
- Tap the (i) icon next to the device name.
- Tap Forget This Device.
- Put the accessory back into pairing mode and pair it fresh.
On Android
- Go to Settings → Connected devices → Bluetooth (on Samsung: Settings → Connections → Bluetooth).
- Tap the gear icon next to the device name.
- Tap Unpair or Forget.
- Put the accessory into pairing mode and re-pair.
Also Forget the Phone From the Accessory
Many accessories (especially car Bluetooth systems) remember paired phones. If the accessory's memory is full or has a corrupted entry for your phone, the pairing will fail on its side. Check the accessory's settings and delete your phone from its paired-device list, then try again.
Toggle Bluetooth Off and On
Don't just use the quick-settings toggle — that keeps Bluetooth partially active on some phones. Go into Settings → Bluetooth and use the toggle there for a true restart of the radio.
Restart Both Devices
Restart your phone and, if possible, power-cycle the accessory. On headphones or speakers, a full power-off (not just standby) clears connection state that can block new pairings.
Check for Interference
Bluetooth uses the 2.4 GHz frequency band, the same as many Wi-Fi routers, microwaves, and baby monitors. If you're having trouble pairing in a specific location, try moving away from other electronics or switching your Wi-Fi router to 5 GHz.
If Bluetooth still won't work at all after these steps, a network settings reset (described in our Wi-Fi troubleshooting guide) can sometimes clear deeper radio issues. Or ask us for more specific help.
Frequently asked questions
My phone can see the Bluetooth device but says 'Pairing unsuccessful' every time. Why?
This usually means either the accessory still has an old entry for your phone in its memory, or the PIN isn't matching. Try clearing the pairing from the accessory's side as well as your phone. Some accessories need a PIN (commonly 0000 or 1234) — check the manual. On Android, look for a prompt asking you to confirm a numeric code that should match on both screens.
My Bluetooth headphones connect but there's no sound, or the sound quality is terrible. What's wrong?
On Android, check that the phone is using the correct Bluetooth audio profile. Go to Settings → Connected devices → (your headphone name) and look for options like HD audio or Bluetooth codec. On iPhone, poor audio during calls sometimes means the headphones have switched to a phone-call audio profile instead of a music profile — hang up any active call and check again. Also make sure media volume is up, not just the ringer.
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