Apple Devices Overheating During Heavy Use: Fixes That Work

GeneralApple Devices Overheating During Heavy Use: Fixes That Work

One of the most widely reported complaints across the Apple Support Community right now is device overheating during sustained heavy use. Owners of recent iPhones, iPads, and Macs are noticing that their hardware becomes uncomfortably warm — sometimes hot enough to trigger temperature warnings, throttle performance, or shut down entirely — when running demanding apps, charging, gaming, recording high-resolution video, or using AI-powered features. The issue is widespread enough that thousands of users have weighed in, and while Apple acknowledges thermal management as normal behavior under load, the frequency and severity many people are experiencing points to something worth troubleshooting carefully.

This guide walks through what’s actually causing the heat, the most reliable fixes reported by the community, and additional steps drawn from deeper platform knowledge.

What Causes This Issue

Overheating on Apple devices is rarely caused by a single factor. It’s usually a stack of conditions hitting the silicon at the same time. Based on patterns from users in the Apple Support Community and known behavior of Apple’s hardware, the most common contributors are:

  • Background indexing after a major iOS, iPadOS, or macOS update. Spotlight, Photos, and iCloud re-index libraries for hours or even days following an upgrade.
  • High ambient temperatures. Apple specifies an operating range of 0°C to 35°C (32°F to 95°F). Exceed that and thermal throttling kicks in fast.
  • Fast charging combined with active use — particularly with MagSafe or 20W+ USB-C bricks while gaming or streaming.
  • Rogue apps stuck in CPU loops. Social media apps, navigation apps, and certain video conferencing tools have been repeat offenders.
  • 5G connectivity, especially mmWave, which draws significantly more power than LTE in weak-signal areas.
  • Apple Intelligence and on-device machine learning workloads on supported devices, which keep the Neural Engine active longer than users expect.
  • Damaged batteries or swollen cells in older devices, which generate excess heat under normal load.
  • Cases that trap heat — particularly thick leather, silicone, or rugged protective cases during charging.

Step-by-Step Fixes

Users in the Apple Support Community report that the following ordered sequence resolves the majority of overheating complaints. Work through it in order rather than skipping ahead.

  1. Remove the case and let the device cool naturally on a flat, hard surface away from direct sunlight. Do not place it in a refrigerator or freezer — condensation will cause far worse damage than the heat.
  2. Force-quit every open app. On iPhone and iPad, swipe up from the bottom and flick each app card upward. On Mac, use Activity Monitor (Applications > Utilities) and look for any process consistently above 80% CPU. Quit suspicious ones.
  3. Toggle Airplane Mode on for two minutes, then off. This resets cellular and Wi-Fi radios, which are frequent silent power drains in weak-signal locations.
  4. Restart the device fully. A clean reboot clears stuck system processes that often survive a simple app closure. On iPhone, press and hold the side button with either volume button, then power off. Wait 30 seconds before restarting.
  5. Check for and install pending updates under Settings > General > Software Update (or System Settings > General > Software Update on Mac). Apple has shipped several thermal-related point releases over the past year.
  6. Audit your Battery usage screen. Go to Settings > Battery and review the last 24 hours and last 10 days. Any app showing disproportionate background activity should be deleted and reinstalled, or have Background App Refresh disabled.
  7. Disable Background App Refresh selectively under Settings > General > Background App Refresh. Turn it off entirely as a test — if temperatures normalize, re-enable apps one at a time.
  8. If the device overheats only while charging, switch to a lower-wattage charger (5W or 12W) and unplug once it reaches 80%. Avoid wireless charging during heavy use.

Additional Solutions

If the ordered list above doesn’t resolve the issue, work through these deeper interventions.

Reset network settings. Persistent cellular hunting in fringe coverage areas is one of the largest hidden heat sources. On iPhone, go to Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone > Reset > Reset Network Settings. You’ll need to re-enter Wi-Fi passwords afterward.

Disable 5G temporarily. Under Settings > Cellular > Cellular Data Options > Voice & Data, switch to LTE for a day. If heat disappears, your area likely has poor 5G coverage and the modem is working overtime to maintain a connection. Use 5G Auto instead of 5G On long-term.

Check battery health. Settings > Battery > Battery Health & Charging. Anything below 80% maximum capacity, or a Service message, means the battery itself is contributing to thermal problems. Replacement resolves it.

Turn off Apple Intelligence features on supported devices if you don’t actively use them. The on-device models keep the Neural Engine warm during indexing of mail, messages, and photos.

Reset all settings (not content). Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone > Reset > Reset All Settings. This clears configuration profiles, VPN configs, and accessibility tweaks that occasionally pin the CPU.

On Mac, run Apple Diagnostics. Shut down, then press and hold the power button on Apple silicon Macs until startup options appear, then press Command-D. The diagnostic will flag fan, sensor, or battery faults directly.

Clear dust from Mac vents. MacBook Pro and Mac mini intakes accumulate dust over 12–18 months, dramatically reducing fan efficiency. Compressed air at an angle works well.

Restore as new as a last software step. Back up to iCloud or a computer, erase the device, and set it up without restoring the backup. If heat vanishes, a corrupted preference or app from your old setup was the culprit.

When to Contact Apple Support

Stop troubleshooting and contact Apple if any of the following apply: the device gets too hot to comfortably hold during light use, the screen shows a temperature warning repeatedly within minutes of being powered on, the battery is visibly swollen or the screen is lifting, the device shuts down unexpectedly even when charged, or Battery Health reports a Service condition. These are hardware-level issues — typically a failing battery, damaged thermal paste application on Macs, or a defective logic board sensor — and they need a Genius Bar appointment or mail-in repair. AppleCare+ covers battery replacement when capacity drops below 80%.

FAQ

Is it normal for my iPhone to get warm while charging? Yes, mild warmth during charging is expected. Hot to the touch — particularly during wireless charging — is not, and indicates the conditions outlined above.

Will overheating permanently damage my device? Repeated thermal events accelerate battery degradation and, over time, can damage solder joints and display adhesive. One-off warnings are harmless; chronic overheating is not.

Why does my Mac get hot during video calls? Video conferencing apps that aren’t optimized for Apple silicon often run under Rosetta or use software encoding. Check for native ARM builds and prefer Safari or FaceTime for calls when possible.

Does Low Power Mode actually help? Yes. It throttles background activity, lowers display refresh rate, and reduces CPU peak frequency. It’s an effective short-term measure during a heat event.

Can I use my device while it’s cooling down? No. Once a temperature warning appears, set the device aside until it returns to ambient temperature. Continuing to use it forces aggressive throttling and prolongs the recovery.

Neil S
Neil S
Neil is a highly qualified Technical Writer with an M.Sc(IT) degree and an impressive range of IT and Support certifications including MCSE, CCNA, ACA(Adobe Certified Associates), and PG Dip (IT). With over 10 years of hands-on experience as an IT support engineer across Windows, Mac, iOS, and Linux Server platforms, Neil possesses the expertise to create comprehensive and user-friendly documentation that simplifies complex technical concepts for a wide audience.
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