All phones generate heat — they're running processors, radios, and screens all at once. The concern is when a phone gets uncomfortably hot to hold, shows a temperature warning, or slows down to protect itself.
What's Normal vs. What's Not
Warm: normal during gaming, video streaming, GPS navigation, or charging. The back of the phone feeling slightly warm to the touch is fine.
Hot: the phone is too hot to comfortably hold, iOS shows a temperature warning screen (a black screen with a thermometer icon), or the phone throttles to slow everything down. This needs attention.
Common Causes
- Gaming or streaming for extended periods — the most common cause. Processors run at high speeds for a long time.
- Charging and using the phone at the same time — especially with fast charging or wireless charging, which generates more heat than standard wired charging.
- A runaway app or background process — a buggy app can pin the processor at 100% without you knowing.
- Direct sunlight or a hot environment — phones have a limited operating temperature range (typically up to about 35°C / 95°F for iPhones).
- A case that traps heat — thick, non-breathable cases prevent heat from dissipating.
How to Cool Down an Overheating Phone
- Stop what you're doing. Close the demanding app or pause the game.
- Remove the case temporarily to let heat escape.
- Stop charging if you're currently on the charger.
- Move it somewhere cooler. Room temperature, in the shade, away from direct sunlight. Don't put it in the freezer — rapid temperature changes can cause condensation damage.
- Check for a runaway app: On iPhone, go to Settings → Battery to see recent high usage. On Android, go to Settings → Battery → Battery usage and look for anything consuming an unusual amount of power.
If It Happens Regularly
- Update apps and iOS/Android — runaway CPU usage is sometimes a bug fixed in an update.
- Check your battery health. A degraded battery works harder and generates more heat. On iPhone: Settings → Battery → Battery Health & Charging.
- Lower screen brightness during extended use — the screen is a significant heat source.
- Avoid using the phone in direct sunlight — ambient heat plus processor heat pushes the phone over its limit quickly.
- Consider your case. Silicone and leather cases trap heat more than thin plastic or no case at all during intensive use.
Occasional warmth during charging or gaming is nothing to worry about. Consistent overheating, or a phone that feels hot even when idle, is worth investigating further. Ask us if you're concerned.