10 Hacks Every Apple CarPlay User Should Know

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Apple’s CarPlay brings much of the power of your iPhone to your vehicle’s dashboard so you can (safely) navigate, play music, and send and receive messages while driving. As with your iPhone, there are plenty of ways to maximize your CarPlay experience to make it work better for you. Use these 10 tricks and hacks to get the most out of it.

Use this setting to customize your CarPlay home screen

If there are icons on your CarPlay home screen for apps you don’t use, you can move the most important ones to the first page and delete those you no longer need. That way, you don’t have to scroll through multiple pages while you’re driving. CarPlay doesn’t have on-screen press-and-hold functionality, so, on your iPhone, go to Settings > General> CarPlay > [Your Vehicle] > Apps and reorganize or remove apps. There’s also a reset button to return to the default setup. Changes will sync to CarPlay in real time.

Other customization options include switching between dark and light modes, selecting clear or dark icons, and changing the wallpaper presets. These can be found by using the CarPlay screen itself, under Settings > Appearance. Apple doesn’t support custom wallpaper, though there are third-party app workarounds.

Use SharePlay or Spotify Jam for collaborative road trip playlists

Even if your phone is the one connected to CarPlay, you don’t have to play DJ alone. Apple Music and Spotify have features (SharePlay and Jam, respectively) that allow others to contribute to collaborative playlists in real time from their own devices. Anyone can join—only the host needs an Apple Music or Spotify Premium subscription to start a session. For Apple Music, tap the player (on your iPhone) or Now Playing (in CarPlay) and tap the SharePlay icon. Other people can scan the QR code and request approval to join. In Spotify, tap the device icon > Start a Jam and invite collaborators with the QR code.

Add iPhone widgets to your CarPlay screen for quick bursts of information

With iOS 26, Apple introduced the option to add widgets to your CarPlay screen so you can see information at a glance the same way you can on your iPhone. If an app has an iPhone widget, it should be available for CarPlay as well—though the functionality and display stack may vary across CarPlay screens. This includes the basics like Weather, Calendar, and Reminders, to multiple Apple Sports widgets for tracking scores across teams and leagues.

To customize your CarPlay widgets, go to Settings > General > CarPlay on your iPhone and select your car. Tap Widgets > Add Widgets and follow the onscreen instructions. You can also drag to rearrange how they appear, or enable Smart Rotate, which will cycle through multiple widgets.

Enable Voice Control to control CarPlay hands-free

CarPlay has a host of voice commands for hands-free control, so you don’t have to look at your screen to scroll or click while you’re driving. With Voice Control, you don’t need to use a wake word or phrase, and CarPlay can handle multiple commands in a series as long as you pause briefly in between. There are commands for general interactions, such as opening apps and swiping between screens, as well as specific Maps and Music controls.

To enable Voice Control, go to Settings > Accessibility on your CarPlay unit and turn the feature on or off. You can also pause Voice Control if you don’t want CarPlay to pick up words as commands: “Stop listening” will deactivate Voice Control, and “Start listening” will resume it.

Enable “Announce Notifications” to hear your messages

Another hands-free setting is Announce Notifications, which allows Siri to read incoming messages aloud through CarPlay. For example, you can hear and reply to texts received via apps like Messages or WhatsApp, rather than having to tap on-screen when these appear. To enable, go to Settings > Notifications > Announce Notifications > CarPlay on your iPhone and toggle the feature on. You can also select which apps you want to receive announcements from. Note that Focus Mode may affect which notifications are announced.

Pin playlists in Apple Music for quick access in CarPlay

A handy Apple Music feature in iOS 26 is the ability to pin your favorite playlists, artists, albums, songs, and music videos to the top of your Library. While this is useful on its own—no more searching or scrolling to find items you listen to frequently—it is even more so in the CarPlay interface, as you can quickly access your favorites while you’re driving. Open the Music app on your iPhone, touch and hold the playlist, album, or song you want to pin, and tap Pin [Item] in the pop-up menu. (To pin an artist, go to the artist’s page and tap the three horizontal dots to open the menu.) Once an item is pinned to your Library, you can tap and hold to determine the action when you click on that item, such as playing an album in a default order or shuffling an artist’s songs.

Use Shortcuts to disable autoplay

A frequent complaint about Bluetooth car audio, including CarPlay, is that media automatically plays as soon as your phone connects, sometimes including a random song or video through an infrequently used app. On your iPhone, you can try an automation shortcut that pauses playback when your device connects to CarPlay. To get started, open the Shortcuts app, and tap the Automation tab. Tap New Automation, then CarPlay, then select Is Connected and Run Immediately followed by Next. Tap Create New Shortcut, then search for the Play/Pause action. Tap Play/Pause and select Pause, then tap the check mark to save.

Set up a custom greeting that plays when CarPlay connects

Another startup shortcut option is an automation that plays a custom sound or greeting when your iPhone connects to CarPlay. This could be a song you like, a specific sound, or even a personalized recorded message. You’ll first want to save the audio file you plan to use in your Files app. Then, open Shortcuts > Automations, tap the New Automation, then tap CarPlay. Select Is Connected and Run Immediately followed by Next. Tap Create New Shortcut, search for File, then tap the option when it appears. Tap File again to open your Files folder, and select your saved audio. Next, search for Play Sound, tap to add the action underneath File, and tap the blue check mark to save.

Customize your driving Focus

iOS has a Focus specifically for driving, which you can use to silence alerts and notifications when your eyes should be on the road. You can have this turn on automatically whenever your iPhone connects to CarPlay, which you’ll find under Settings > Driving Focus on CarPlay. If you’ve never set up this Focus before, you may have to add it: Go to Settings > Focus on your iPhone, tap (+), then tap Driving. From here, you can also choose individual contacts to silence or allow notifications and calls from and set up an auto-reply message to let contacts know that you’re driving and can’t respond.

Add wireless CarPlay to your wired unit

There are some advantages to wired CarPlay: smoother (lossless) audio, built-in charging, plus a cheaper price tag, if you’re adding CarPlay to your vehicle. The downside, of course, is that you have to keep your device plugged in. To get the best of both, buy a wireless CarPlay adapter that plugs into your car and connects your CarPlay unit to your phone via Bluetooth whenever you start your vehicle. Some options I’ve seen recommended by users online include AAWireless TWO+, Ottocast Mini Pico, and Carlinkit 2Air, all three of which can handle both CarPlay and Android Auto.

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