The Best Bluetooth Tracker (2024)

The research

  • How we picked and tested
  • Our pick if you have an iPhone: Apple AirTag
  • Flaws but not dealbreakers
  • Our pick if you have an Android phone: Tile
  • What to look forward to
  • The competition

How we picked and tested

The Best Bluetooth Tracker (1)

Over the past few years, we’ve tested more than a dozen Bluetooth trackers. The major players in this category are well known. But to make sure we didn’t miss any, during our research for a previous version of this guide, we turned to Amazon and Google.

Here’s what we look for in a great Bluetooth tracker:

  • Network size: Most Bluetooth trackers can utilize other phones that have the tracker’s app installed to silently and privately search for your lost objects. The more people who use a platform, the better your chances of recovering your lost stuff.
  • Precision finding: Once you know the general location of your lost tracker, narrowing down exactly where it’s hiding is the key to finding it. Trackers use a combination of physical speakers and digital apps to help you locate your belongings.
  • Size: A tracker that’s too obtrusive to carry around with you or to attach to the thing you want to track is useless. Smaller and lighter is better.
  • Range: The longer the range, the farther you can be from the tracker and still be able to find your lost item.
  • Volume: If you’re near your tracker but can’t hear it, that’s no good. Despite having little space for a speaker, some of these can get quite loud.
  • Other features: A replaceable battery isn’t absolutely required, but it’s a big plus. We also prefer trackers that can trigger an alarm on your phone. An app that is easy to navigate and updates location information quickly is important too.

Prior to the 2021 introduction of Apple’s AirTag, the most important test we conducted was to determine each tracker’s potential range—how far away from the tracker we could move a paired smartphone before we lost the Bluetooth connection. In 2019, we tested the range in Wirecutter’s 190-foot-long office in Long Island City, New York. We set each tracker on a shelf, triggered it to ring, and then walked away with our paired iPhone while noting the distance using a measuring wheel. Once the tracker’s smartphone app showed the tracker as out of range—or we physically hit the wall—we recorded the distance. We repeated this test at least five times per tracker and calculated the average distance for each across the measurements. Because AirTags leverage a much larger network and are more precise once you’re in range, we still test the effective distance, but it’s not as important.

Our pick if you have an iPhone: Apple AirTag

The Best Bluetooth Tracker (2)

Top pick

Apple AirTag

The best Bluetooth tracker for iPhone users

AirTags leverage Apple’s huge network of devices to find lost goods, and they’re impressively accurate in pinpointing an item’s precise location.

Buying Options

$39 from Amazon

$25 from Walmart

$29 from Apple

If you use an iPhone and want to track your stuff, Apple’s AirTag is easily the best option. Compared with the competition, this tracker has two distinct strengths that make it our top choice: The AirTag uses Apple’s huge network of devices to assist in finding the area where you left your lost item, and precision tracking makes it easier for you to locate the exact spot. Taken together, these two features mean you’re more likely to find what you’re looking for with the AirTag than with any other Bluetooth tracking system.

Apple’s Find My network has by far the largest number of devices that can look for your stuff. Since 2019, Apple’s Find My app has used Bluetooth in every iPhone, iPad, and Mac that’s on the network—that’s a billion devices—to passively and anonymously find lost iPhones, Macs, and even contacts who share their location. AirTags use the same system to report the location of any item you attach them to. In practical terms, this means if you leave your AirTag-equipped keys at the coffee shop, for example, as long as someone there at some point has an Apple device, the keys’ location will be reported to you (and the person with the iPhone or other Apple device who identified it will never know). Although Tile’s trackers work the same way, they do so on a far smaller scale—it’s much more likely that the customer sitting one table over has an iPhone than a Tile.

Setup is foolproof. Thanks to Apple’s control over both the hardware (the iPhone or iPad and the AirTag) and the software, activating a new AirTag is seamless. When you unpack a new AirTag and place it next to your phone or tablet, a pop-up appears on your screen, much like when you’re pairing a set of AirPods or an Apple Watch. Once you tap Connect, you can set a name for the AirTag and register it to your Apple ID. There are no settings or menus, and the entire process takes under a minute. (Tile’s setup isn’t any more difficult, but you do need to manually launch the Tile app first, which is an extra step.)

You track and manage your AirTags in Apple’s Find My app, where you can see the location and options for each tag. You can also rename or remove an AirTag on this screen, with the latter option resetting it completely, unpairing it from your Apple ID and allowing someone else to use it as if it were new. You can connect up to 16 AirTags to an account.

When you lose an AirTag, you can enable Lost Mode in the Find My app. If someone finds the AirTag (and the item it’s attached to), they can tap the AirTag with their phone to see contact information for returning the item to its owner.

The Precision Tracking feature helps you pinpoint your AirTag’s exact location. The other key feature of the AirTag works once you know your tracker’s general location. Like the iPhone 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15 lineups, AirTags support a wireless connection known as Ultra Wideband, which allows for precision locating at relatively short distances. Once you’re in the general vicinity of your AirTag (say, the coffee shop where you left your keys), you can tap the Find button in the Find My app. The app then shows you the direction and distance to the AirTag in question, and your phone vibrates as you get closer and allows you to play a sound to assist in your search. In our testing the AirTag’s tracking signal took a moment to lock on, but once it did we were thoroughly impressed by the system’s accuracy.

Compared with Tile’s trackers, AirTags have a much shorter Bluetooth range. Apple doesn’t state any specific figures, but we found that the tracker maintained a connection to our test iPhone for only 30 feet or so. On the face of it, that doesn’t sound great, but wandering around your office or home looking for your keys isn’t that different from using a Tile with a 100-foot range. And we think Apple’s much, much larger crowd-finding network and precision locating are more important factors, since that’s what will make it more likely that you’ll recover stuff you’ve truly lost.

It has a sleek design. With its glossy, white plastic front and metal back, the AirTag looks and feels a lot like a pin-back button you might put on a jean jacket or backpack. The diameter is a little larger than a quarter, and the tracker is actually about a millimeter or two thicker than many iPhones, although its curved design makes it feel thinner. You have the option to add custom engraving when you order from Apple, with up to four characters (letters and/or numbers) or selected emoji; if you buy the four-pack, you can get different text on each. Noticeably absent is any sort of attachment mechanism such as a key-ring hole or adhesive back. Instead, you have to buy an extra accessory. Of course, Apple sells a handful of its own, and plenty of third-party companies sell all sorts of designs, as well.

It can chirp if you use the Find My app or Siri to ping it. The tune plays for about six seconds, with a repeating series of beeps. We found both the tone and the volume sufficient to help us find the AirTag when it was hidden around our testing space, comparable to what we’ve experienced with Tile trackers. If your AirTag is buried under a pile of clothes, for instance, you may not hear it, but the tone should otherwise be audible as long as you’re in the same room.

The Best Bluetooth Tracker (4)

Each AirTag runs on a removable, user-replaceable battery. It’s the only Apple device that actually makes the replacement process easy. When the battery runs low (which, in our testing, happened after a little over a year of use), the Find My app notifies you, and you can swap in a new CR2032 battery by twisting off the AirTag’s metal back, removing the old battery, and popping the new one in. Even with this accessible design, AirTags are IP67 rated, so they should survive being under 1 meter of water for up to 30 minutes, although Apple warns: “Splash, water, and dust resistance are not permanent conditions and resistance might decrease as a result of normal wear.”

It will automatically tell you if you’ve left something behind. You can toggle the alerts on and off per device, and you can set exceptions—say, if you don’t need to be alerted every time you leave home without your AirTag-armed backpack—with small, medium, or large separation radiuses, depending on the sensitivity level you need.

You can easily share AirTags. If there’s an item that you want everyone in your household or family to be able to track, such as a suitcase or a bike, you can share the AirTag’s location with up to five people.

You can find and disable an AirTag that is following you without your knowledge. When AirTags launched, there was widespread concern that the very thing that made Apple’s Bluetooth trackers so good at finding stuff—the extensive Find My network—would also make it easy for abusers to track their victims without their knowledge. And that has happened. But Apple has introduced several features over the years that make it more difficult, including partnering with Google to ensure that both iPhone and Android users receive alerts when Bluetooth trackers are detected near them.

Now when an AirTag or other Find My–compatible device (such as a pair of AirPods) is detected with you, your iPhone or Android phone will receive a notification regarding the tracker’s presence with information about who it belongs to and directions for disabling it.

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Flaws but not dealbreakers

Your AirTag can’t find your iPhone. Unlike Tile’s trackers (and some others), the AirTag doesn’t have any way to ring your phone if it’s nearby. So if it’s your iPhone that’s lost, you’ll have to rely on the Find My app on another Apple device to find it.

You can’t attach an AirTag directly to an item. Key rings and loops cost extra, so the actual cost is higher than the price of the tracker itself, unless you plan on just tossing one loose into a bag or pocket (which we at Wirecutter often do). Apple’s accessories all cost at least as much as a single AirTag, effectively doubling the price. Obviously, you can save quite a bit by buying from a third-party accessory maker.

Our pick if you have an Android phone: Tile

The Best Bluetooth Tracker (5)

Top pick

Tile Mate (2022)

The best Bluetooth tracker for Android users

The Tile Mate has a long range, is quite loud, and gives you a better chance of finding your lost stuff than other non-Apple trackers.

Buying Options

$25 $18 from Amazon

You save $7 (28%)

$25 from Walmart

$24 from Best Buy

Tile Essentials (2022)

The best Bluetooth tracker for Android users

The Tile Essentials set bundles two Tile Mates, the Tile Slim, and the Tile Sticker in a bundle that’s more affordable than buying them separately.

Buying Options

$70 from Amazon

$75 from Best Buy

AirTags don’t work with Android phones, but that doesn’t mean non-Apple folks don’t have a good tracker option. Tile’s Bluetooth trackers, including the Tile Mate (2022), the Tile Slim (2022), and the Tile Sticker (2022) (also available packed together in the Tile Essentials bundle), are the next most popular, so they have the second-largest crowd-finding network. They also offer impressive range and alarm volume, and are sized and shaped in more convenient ways: You can put a Tile Mate on a keychain without buying an extra holder, slip a Tile Slim into your wallet, or attach a Tile Sticker to any flat surface.

The Tile Mate uses Tile’s crowd-finding network to track down your lost item. If your Tile is out of Bluetooth range, you can view a map displaying its location the last time your phone made contact with it. If your phone is no longer at that location—or if you’re worried that it won’t be—you can mark the item as lost, which invokes Tile’s crowd-finding feature. Tile tells us it has sold more than 50 million trackers. That doesn’t mean all of them are currently active, and a big portion likely aren’t; early Tile trackers didn’t have replaceable batteries, which meant the entire device had to be replaced annually. So the total number of Tile units that make up its crowd-finding network is a tiny fraction of Apple’s. According to the company’s figures, however, “millions of items” are found daily, and of those marked as lost, Tile says 90% are found. In fall 2022, Tile opened its network up to parent company Life360’s 42 million smartphone users, who can choose to opt in to help Tile members find their trackers. If they do so, that would expand Tile’s crowd-finding network by up to 10x.

The Tile Mate, the Tile Pro, and the Tile Slim have “Scan me if found” QR codes on the back. When the finder scans the code, a website that says the attached item is lost pops up on the finder’s phone, and the Tile’s location is sent to its owner. The owner can also choose to put the Tile in lost mode and share their phone number and a message so that the finder can text or call them to return what they’ve lost.

The Best Bluetooth Tracker (8)

Tile trackers come in a variety of shapes and sizes. AirTags come in only one round, button-like design, but the Tile line offers more options. The Tile Mate has the most general-purpose design, with an opening in the top-left corner that lets you attach a keychain, lanyard, or similar tether. It’s a round-cornered square that’s around 1.49 inches across and 0.28 inches thick—smaller than a matchbook. The Tile Slim is designed to slide easily into a wallet; it’s in the shape of a credit card, and at 2.5 millimeters, it’s as thick as three of them. The Tile Sticker is roughly the size of five quarters stacked, and the small, round tracker sticks with adhesive to whatever you want to track. This makes the Sticker a good option for anything that doesn’t have a key ring or tether, and because this tracker is so small, you can attach it in a discreet spot.

In our distance test, all four Tile variations offered impressive range. We placed them at one end of Wirecutter’s 190-foot-long office, and all remained connected to our phone as we walked to the other end. We were able to hear them chirping from that far, too, which means you’ll likely be able to hear them in most houses or apartments (190 feet is more than double the length of a basketball court).

The Best Bluetooth Tracker (9)

You can’t replace the battery, but it lasts longer than an AirTag. While the previous-generation Tile Mate ran on a user-replaceable CR1632 lithium battery, the newest edition has a sealed-in battery that’s supposed to last for up to three years. Tile insists that the tracker is recyclable at the end of its life, but we can’t help but see this as a step backward in terms of hardware longevity. Unfortunately, neither the Tile Slim nor the Tile Sticker uses a replaceable battery either, though Tile says their batteries also last for up to three years. (The Tile Pro has a replaceable battery that should last you about a year before you need a new one.) The entire Tile lineup is rated IP67, so each tracker is protected against dust and should survive being submerged in water up to 1 meter deep for up to 30 minutes.

The Best Bluetooth Tracker (10)

The optional subscription plan offers extra benefits, but you don’t need it. The$3-per-month (or $30-per-year) Tile Premium covers as many Tiles as you own. The service includes free battery replacements shipped to you each year (for the Tile Mate and the Tile Pro), an extended warranty (from one year to three), and SMS-based support. On the software side, it offers a 30-day location history, unlimited sharing of your Tile trackers’ locations, and smart alerts that let you know when you’ve left home without any of your Tiles. (The last feature is based on entering your home address, and in our testing we could get a third of a mile away before receiving the alert, which isn’t super handy.) Aside from separation notifications, Apple doesn’t provide any of these features with an AirTag. For $100 a year, Tile also offers Premium Protect, which has the same features plus a $1,000-per-year reimbursem*nt for (most) registered items that are lost. Tile Premium is an unnecessary expense for most people, but Premium Protect may be worth the investment if you’re tracking something valuable.

Setting up any Tile is simple. Instead of having to go into your phone’s Settings menu to add the Tile, the Tile app (Android, iOS) handles everything. You just launch the app, tap a button to add a new Tile, and press firmly on the Tile’s center button when prompted. If you have an iPhone, Apple’s AirTag setup may be a little more automatic, but both processes are fast and simple.

In the app, you can name each Tile whatever you like and add a photo; for example, if you have a Tile Mate in your backpack, you can add a photo of the backpack for that particular Tile. You can view your devices—all Tiles, your paired phone, and any other phones and tablets running the Tile app under your account—in list or map mode. You can pair an unlimited number of Tiles with a phone, but only four Tiles can actively communicate with an Android phone (via Bluetooth) at once. An unlimited number of Tiles can communicate with an Apple device at once.

Tile trackers offer less precision than AirTags over short distances. They use a standard form of Bluetooth, without the layer of Ultra Wideband technology that makes Apple's Find My app so accurate. In oral testimony to Congress (PDF) presented by its general counsel Kirsten Daru in April 2021, Tile said it had developed a product that uses Ultra Wideband technology but that Apple was preventing compatibility with iPhones.

You can detect an unwanted Tile tracking you, but not as easily as an AirTag. Tile requires you to download the Tile app and then use the app’s Scan and Secure feature to detect a Tile that may be tracking you without your knowledge. The app is available for both iPhone and Android users, but those who might not be familiar with Tile won’t know to install the app to detect the trackers. AirTags and Bluetooth trackers that are compatible with Apple’s Find My network and Google’s Find My Device network automatically alert both iPhone and Android users if unknown trackers are nearby. (Tile’s trackers are not compatible with Apple’s and Google’s respective device-finding networks.)

Tile also offers a workaround to its Scan and Secure feature called Anti-Theft Mode, which prevents a Tile from showing up when someone uses Scan and Secure to detect a tracker. To set up Anti-Theft Mode, Tile requires you to go through a rigorous identification-verification process, including providing government-issued ID and biometric verification. This process is designed to deter Tile owners from using the devices for illegal activity, such as stalking, through a lack of anonymity. After Anti-Theft Mode is activated, a person who is unknowingly being tracked by a Tile won’t receive an unwanted-tracker notification on their phone.

The punishment for a Tile user who enables Anti-Theft Mode and then uses it for stalking is a $1 million fine, but we’re skeptical that that’s an effective deterrent.

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What to look forward to

New Bluetooth trackers compatible with Google’s Find My network are rolling out this year, and we plan to test them this fall to see how they stack up to our current Android tracker pick, the Tile Mate.

Chipolo released two trackers, the $35 Card Point and the $30 One Point, and Pebblebee has three Google Find My–compatible trackers, the $30 Pebblebee Clip, $35 Pebblebee Card, and $35 Pebblebee Tag.

These are the first available trackers to use the global network of Android devices to track items, similar to the way Apple’s AirTags use the iOS Find My network.

Eufy and and JioTag are also releasing Google Find My trackers soon.

The competition

Chipolo’s One Spot uses Apple’s Find My network, meaning it’s just as likely that someone’s iPhone will anonymously find your lost tracker as it is with an AirTag. But the One Spot has only one advantage over the AirTag—a keychain hole as part of its design—and a number of disadvantages. It doesn’t have the precise finding capabilities, it’s not as resistant to the elements, and it’s physically larger. Unlike the Chipolo One (2020) (which is physically identical but uses Chipolo’s crowd-finding network instead of Apple’s), the One Spot can’t be used to trigger an alert on your phone, nor can it let you know if you’ve left something behind. There’s no reason to choose the One Spot over the AirTag, especially since they cost about the same.

The Tile Pro (2022) is a more expensive and slightly larger, fob-shaped version of the Tile tracker, with a longer range. Tile says this model will stay connected for up to 400 feet, or 40 feet longer than the length of a football field. In our tests the Tile Pro remained connected for the entire length of our 190-foot office. Though a longer range is better, we’ve concluded that in almost any scenario around a home or office, the Tile Mate is sufficient. If your house is longer than 400 feet, you can swing the extra $10 for the Tile Pro. The Pro is also the only current Tile tracker that uses a replaceable battery, but it lasts only one year, compared to the other models’ three.

Orbit offers a number of tracker styles, including the Orbit Glasses tracker, which fits on eyeglasses or sunglasses. Unfortunately the Orbit network is just too limited for us to recommend choosing Orbit over Tile. Anecdotally, I lost a pair of sunglasses that were outfitted with the Orbit Glasses tracker in busy and tech-heavy New York City. And despite marking them as lost in the app in hopes of an Orbit user passing by and finding them, I never received a notice that the sunglasses were found.

Cube offers three designs of its tracker: the Cube, the Cube Pro, and the Cube Shadow, the last of which is a slim, wallet-friendly size. Though the Cube Shadow promises the same range as the Tile Slim, the Cube and Cube Pro offer half the range of the Tile Mate and Tile Pro, respectively, and the entire Cube family has a smaller crowd-finding network than Tile’s trackers.

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The Best Bluetooth Tracker (2024)
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