How Apple devices decide which known wireless networks to auto-join
Known wireless networks are networks that your device has joined before or that are installed on your device as managed networks, such as through a device management service. To determine which known wireless networks to automatically join, your device prioritizes connections in this order, from highest priority to lowest priority.
1. Most preferred network
Known wireless networks are scored based on your actions. When you manually connect to a network, its score increases. When you manually disconnect from a network, its score decreases. The network with the highest score is the most preferred.
2. Private network
Private wireless networks are those set up in homes and offices, and they can include a Personal Hotspot. The most recently joined network has highest priority.
3. Public network
Public wireless networks are designed for general access in public places such as hotels, airports, and coffee shops, and they can include Passpoint (Hotspot 2.0) and EAP-SIM networks. Known public networks can also include managed networks set up by your wireless carrier and its partners.
If necessary to choose between multiple public or private wireless networks, the following additional criteria apply.
4. Configuration method
Private wireless networks configured using a device management service are preferred over manually joined networks.
5. Highest supported Wi-Fi standard
Highest to lowest priority:
Wi-Fi 7 networks
Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 6 networks
Wi-Fi 5 networks
and so on
6. Frequency band
Highest to lowest priority:
6 GHz
5 GHz
5 GHz (DFS)
2.4 GHz
7. Security
Highest to lowest priority:
WPA Enterprise (any version)
WPA Personal (any version)
WEP (any version)
An open (unsecured) wireless network that wasn't manually joined in the past 2 weeks isn't auto-joined, unless it was installed on the device as a managed network in the last 24 hours.
8. Signal strength
The wireless network with the strongest signal has highest priority. Learn about signal strength and RSSI.
After restarting an iPhone or iPad, Wi-Fi credentials become available only after you unlock the device. Your device can then automatically join a known wireless network.