X
CNET logo Why You Can Trust CNET

Our expert, award-winning staff selects the products we cover and rigorously researches and tests our top picks. If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. Reviews ethics statement

Apple's Find My app can now help you find more things

Track down products from Belkin, Chipolo and VanMoof using Apple's Find My app.

Alison DeNisco Rayome Managing Editor
Managing Editor Alison DeNisco Rayome joined CNET in 2019, and is a member of the Home team. She is a co-lead of the CNET Tips and We Do the Math series, and manages the Home Tips series, testing out new hacks for cooking, cleaning and tinkering with all of the gadgets and appliances in your house. Alison was previously an editor at TechRepublic.
Expertise Home Tips, including cooking, cleaning and appliances hacks Credentials
  • National Silver Azbee Award for Impact/Investigative Journalism; National Gold Azbee Award for Online Single Topic Coverage by a Team; National Bronze Azbee Award for Web Feature Series
Patrick Holland Managing Editor
Patrick Holland has been a phone reviewer for CNET since 2016. He is a former theater director who occasionally makes short films. Patrick has an eye for photography and a passion for everything mobile. He is a colorful raconteur who will guide you through the ever-changing, fast-paced world of phones, especially the iPhone and iOS. He used to co-host CNET's I'm So Obsessed podcast and interviewed guests like Jeff Goldblum, Alfre Woodard, Stephen Merchant, Sam Jay, Edgar Wright and Roy Wood Jr.
Expertise Apple, iPhone, iOS, Android, Samsung, Sony, Google, Motorola, interviews, coffee equipment, cats Credentials
  • Patrick's play The Cowboy is included in the Best American Short Plays 2011-12 anthology. He co-wrote and starred in the short film Baden Krunk that won the Best Wisconsin Short Film award at the Milwaukee Short Film Festival.
Alison DeNisco Rayome
Patrick Holland
2 min read
find-my-app-icon

Apple is opening up the Find My network to third-party devices.

Patrick Holland/CNET

Apple is growing its Find My network to include devices made by third-party companies, including Belkin, Chipolo and VanMoof. Find My functionality launched in 2009 along with iPhone 3GS . Over the past 12 years it has grown from just tracking lost iPhones to being able to find most Apple products like Macs, Apple Watches and AirPods . With the launch of iOS 13 in 2019, Find My could get the approximate location of your lost Apple device using Bluetooth. For example when your iPhone is in Lost Mode, other Apple devices on the Find My network can discover it via Bluetooth and share that info securely and anonymously back to you. Currently, the Find My network has hundreds of millions of Apple devices tied to it.

Starting today, you can track non-Apple products like VanMoof's S3 and X3 e-bikes and starting in June Belkin's Soundform Freedom True Wireless Earbuds and the Chipolo One Spot item finder which can be attached to keys or a backpack, for example.

Third parties work with Apple as part of its MFi program to get products certified that they follow specifications for things like privacy, end-to-end encryption and unwanted tracking protection. Find My products can be added to the Items tab of the Find My app and attached to your Apple ID. If you ever sell or give a Find My item to someone else, it's just a simple swipe left to remove it from your Apple ID.

Certified Find My items have a built-in speaker to play a locate sound if you trigger it from within the app. You can set a Find My item to Lost Mode and be notified when it's found or add a note with an email address or phone number. Even if the item isn't online, it can be found using Bluetooth by other Apple and non-Apple devices enrolled in Find My. And the entire process is encrypted end-to-end to protect your privacy.

All Find My items or devices will have a "Works with Apple Find My" badge. If someone comes across your item and sees the badge they can go into their own Find My app into the Identify Found item section to report it as found. If the item has an attached note from Lost Mode the finder would be able to view it.

More products and accessories will enter the Find My network soon, Apple said in a press release Tuesday. 

Correction at 5:50 p.m. ET: Find My uses Bluetooth to find an approximate location of an item or Apple device that is in Lost Mode.