How to Stop iTunes from Updating iOS Software

Sep 12, 2016 - 6 Comments

Stop iTunes from updating iOS software

When you connect an iPhone or iPad to a computer with iTunes and an iOS software update is available, you will be notified with a pop-up that tells you a new version of iOS is available and asks if you want to update to the new version of iOS system software. Additionally, if you click on the “Check for Update” button in iTunes when an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch is connected, the same iOS software update process begins and the software will download and attempt to install.

If you have chosen to accept an iOS software update in iTunes that you immediately realize you do not want to actually install, you can stop the iOS update process in iTunes by intervening quickly on a Mac or Windows PC.


Speed is important, if you hesitate too long after pressing the update buttons in iTunes then it is quickly too late (depending on the side of the update download) and you’ll need to just let the update complete installation, possibly considering a downgrade. Note this actually stops iTunes from downloading the update and proceeding with the install, it doesn’t just stop the iOS update notification like what is available from on the device.

Stopping an iOS Software Update and Downloads in iTunes

After iTunes alerts you to new software updates being available and after you have clicked to “Check for Update” or “Download and Update”, you need to act fast and move quick to stop the update…

  1. Click the Download button in the upper right corner of iTunes, it looks like a small arrow pointing down
  2. Click the download button to stop the iOS download and update

  3. Look for the “iPhone Software Update” or “iPad Software Update” entry and quickly click on the (X) small stop button to end the download and stop the iOS software update from proceeding
  4. Click to stop the download of iOS in iTunes

If the progress bar of the iOS software update in iTunes changes to “stopped” you know you were successful in stopping the download and update process from going any further. Then you can simply select the item in the downloads list and hit the “Delete” key to remove it. The process can be repeated the next time an update is accidentally starting to download, but it always requires quick action.

Stop iTunes from updating iOS software

You must move quick because some software updates are quite small and with a fast internet connection the iOS update will quickly download and start trying to install. Once the update is installing itself, you need to let it finish because trying to intervene mid-update is a recipe for making the iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch useless and require a full restore. Some versions of iOS can be downgraded after the fact, so that would be the next approach if you accidentally installed an update you didn’t want, you can learn more about downgrading system software here.

Prevent iTunes from Checking for an iOS Update by Ignoring an iOS Update

If you want to keep iTunes from checking for the same iOS update you just stopped, you need to ignore the update. The easiest way to do that is when the pop-up appears in iTunes, choose the “Do not ask me again” option checkbox and do not choose to download or install it.

Ignore iOS update and block it in iTunes

This obviously requires iTunes, and at the moment there is no way to ignore or end iOS software updates from happening on the device itself directly in iOS. Users can stop the iOS software update notifications on an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch but the iOS update will attempt to continue to download itself to the device and harangue the user to install unless some preventative measures are taken. Perhaps a future version of iOS will offer an ability to completely ignore an iOS software update directly on the device, but in the meantime the only way to accomplish this is when the device is connected to a computer with iTunes.

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Posted by: Paul Horowitz in iTunes, Tips & Tricks, Troubleshooting

6 Comments

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  1. A trick I picked up on the internet no longer works with the update.
    To free up space one could go to the iTunes store, pick a movie that exceeded the phone’s storage capacity, and click to “rent”the movie. Shortly a message would appear saying insufficient space, and the “download” was unsuccessful. I’d then go to setting and find I’d recovered as much as a gig of space! DELIGHTED.
    Yesterday I experimented and found out I was charged even though the download as unsuccessful.
    It appears most of the recovered capacity was due to cleaning up space from Facebook. I hope you’ve got another method of clearing space.

  2. Alex says:

    “with a fast internet connection the iOS update will quickly download and start trying to install”

    Well, because of iOS files are circa 2GB in size, I think there might be some lapse of time before iOS starts to install ;)

  3. joe says:

    How about if I start the upgrade while viewing my router log then quickly stop it.
    The IP address of the update server could possibly be copied from the log into a blacklist at the router.
    Ripple effect might include the lack of iCloud services and Find My Phone. Maybe not.

  4. Robert says:

    The big perk to using iTunes is that you can install an iOS update over an iPhone without adequate storage since OTA requires more storage than IPSW updates.

    And iTunes backups and restores are much faster too.

  5. Rjck says:

    Can you also do Android?

    • Paul says:

      iTunes will not update any Android software, it is limited to Apple iOS products and tvOS. Most Android system software is updated OTA on the device itself through the settings.

      We sometimes cover Android stuff as it relates to interacting with Apple, but we tend to focus on the Mac and iOS platforms.

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