Surprise iPhone Update Brings Blood Oxygen Tracking Back To Apple Watch

Posted by David Phelan, Senior Contributor | 3 hours ago | /consumer-tech, /innovation, Consumer Tech, Innovation, standard, technology | Views: 6


Apple today announced that it would release an iPhone update — and it’s one that nobody had been expecting. The surprise release concerns a missing feature on the Apple Watch — blood oxygen monitoring, which was removed from some Apple Watches 18 months ago because of a legal dispute. The update has just gone live. You can read the background to the dispute here, and below I’ll explain how to download the new software and why it’s important.

Which iPhones Can Run iOS 18.6.1?

The new iOS 18.6.1 software is compatible with all iPhones from 2018 onwards. That means the iPhone Xs, iPhone Xs Max and iPhone Xr and all iPhones since, including the iPhone SE in both its second- and third-generation models. And all members of the iPhone 16 series are included, right up to the iPhone 16e.

This is a medium-sized update, around 720MB on my iPhone 16 Pro Max, and it downloaded and installed in little more than 10 minutes.

ForbesApple Reveals Apple Watch Missing Feature Returns To U.S. Users Today

How To Get It

The update arrived just after 10 a.m. Pacific on Aug. 14, 2025. You download it like this: open the iPhone Settings app, then choose General, followed by Software Update. Next, click on Download and Install, and it’ll be on your phone shortly.

iOS 18.6.1 — What’s In The Release

Apple’s release notes were sparses but indicated the main function like this. “This update provides a new Blood Oxygen experience for users in the United States with Apple Watch Series 9 and Series 10, and Apple Watch Ultra 2. Measurements are calculated on iPhone and viewed in the Health app,” the notes said.

If you were wondering why Apple was releasing something for iPhone that affected the Apple Watch, there’s your answer: you can read the data in the Health app on the iPhone, so an iPhone update was necessary to make that possible.

There may be additional security updates, bug fixes and other elements but if so, Apple’s staying tight-lipped about them for now. This update is all about the Apple Watch update. The removal of the blood oxygen monitoring feature came at the beginning of 2024, so Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2 had only been on sale for a little more than three months, and Series 10 hadn’t launched. This change will bring the feature to millions of Apple Watch users for the first time.

ForbesApple iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro Release Date: New Date Enters The Schedule

The absence of the blood oxygen monitoring feature was because of a legal dispute between Apple and medical technology company Masimo. This redesigned feature seems to avoid the dispute. “This update was enabled by a recent U.S. Customs ruling,” Apple says.

There’s also an watchOS 11 update for those Apple Watch models the company mentions, but for the data to be read on the user’s companion iPhone, the latest software is necessary.

You can read more about the changes to Apple Watch, and why it’s important, here.

ForbesDid Apple Just Accidentally Reveal Apple Watch Ultra 3 Design?



Forbes

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *