If your Apple Notes have stopped syncing across your iPhone, iPad, and Mac, you are not alone. This is a widely reported issue being actively discussed in the Apple Support Community, with users describing missing notes, stalled uploads, duplicate entries, and notes that appear on one device but never reach the others. The problem has intensified following recent iCloud and operating system updates, and it affects both personal Apple ID accounts and Managed Apple IDs used in education and enterprise environments.
This guide walks you through every reliable fix, starting with the simplest checks and moving to deeper system-level solutions. Follow the steps in order to avoid making the problem worse.
What Causes This Issue
Apple Notes relies on iCloud sync to push changes across your devices in near real time. When sync breaks, the cause usually falls into one of these categories:
- An iCloud account signed in on one device but not properly authenticated on another.
- Notes stored locally in the On My iPhone or On My Mac account instead of iCloud.
- A stalled CloudKit push after a major iOS, iPadOS, or macOS update.
- Insufficient iCloud storage, which silently blocks new note uploads.
- Low Power Mode, Low Data Mode, or restrictive VPN configurations interfering with background sync.
- Corrupted note containers, often caused by force-quitting the Notes app mid-sync.
- Date and time set manually instead of automatically, which breaks CloudKit token validation.
Users in the Apple Support Community have noted that the issue often appears immediately after upgrading to a new major iOS or macOS release, suggesting that the sync token regeneration process does not always complete cleanly during the upgrade.
Step-by-Step Fixes
- Verify iCloud Notes is enabled on every device. On iPhone or iPad, go to Settings, tap your name, choose iCloud, then See All, and confirm Notes is turned on. On Mac, open System Settings, click your name, choose iCloud, and ensure Notes is enabled. If it was already on, toggle it off, wait 30 seconds, and turn it back on. This forces a fresh sync handshake.
- Check your iCloud storage. Open Settings, tap your name, then iCloud, and look at the storage bar. If you are near or at your limit, Notes sync will stall. Free up space or upgrade your iCloud+ plan.
- Force-close and relaunch the Notes app. Swipe up from the bottom of the screen (or double-click the Home button), find Notes, and swipe it away. Reopen it and wait two full minutes on Wi-Fi for sync to resume.
- Restart all affected devices. A clean reboot clears stuck background daemons, including the cloudd and bird processes that handle iCloud transfers on Apple platforms.
- Set date and time automatically. Go to Settings, General, Date & Time, and enable Set Automatically. Mismatched system time is one of the most common silent causes of CloudKit failures.
- Move local notes into iCloud. Open Notes and check whether you have a folder labelled On My iPhone or On My Mac. Notes stored here never sync. Select them and move them into the iCloud account folder.
- Sign out of iCloud and back in. On the device with the worst sync behaviour, go to Settings, tap your name, scroll down, and choose Sign Out. Keep a copy of your data when prompted. Restart, then sign back in. This regenerates all sync tokens.
Additional Solutions
If the standard fixes do not resolve the issue, try these deeper interventions.
Disable and re-enable Notes sync with a longer wait. Turn off Notes in iCloud settings, but this time wait a full ten minutes before re-enabling. Several users in the Apple Support Community report that shorter intervals do not give the server enough time to release the old sync state.
Check Notes account settings. On iPhone and iPad, go to Settings, scroll to Apps, tap Notes, and confirm the default account is iCloud rather than On My iPhone. If the default is local, every new note you create will be invisible to your other devices.
Disable Low Power Mode and Low Data Mode. Both settings throttle background iCloud activity. Go to Settings, Battery, and turn off Low Power Mode. Then check Wi-Fi and Cellular settings for Low Data Mode and disable it temporarily.
Test on cellular versus Wi-Fi. Some sync failures are tied to restrictive corporate or public Wi-Fi networks that block CloudKit endpoints. Switching to cellular for a few minutes is a fast way to confirm this.
Check System Status. Visit Apple’s System Status page in Safari and confirm that iCloud Notes shows a green indicator. Ongoing outages are uncommon but do happen.
Update to the latest software. Apple has released several point updates throughout 2026 that specifically address CloudKit sync regressions. Go to Settings, General, Software Update on each device and install anything pending.
Remove and re-add a problematic device. If only one device is misbehaving while the rest sync fine, that device is the issue. After backing up locally, erase it using Settings, General, Transfer or Reset, then set it up fresh and sign back into iCloud.
Check for locked notes. Locked Notes sometimes fail to sync if the password was recently changed on another device. Unlock each locked note, then lock it again with the current password.
When to Contact Apple Support
If you have worked through every step above and notes are still missing, duplicated, or refusing to sync, it is time to escalate. Contact Apple Support directly if you experience any of the following:
- Notes that exist on one device but cannot be recovered on any other, even after a full sign-out and sign-in cycle.
- Repeated CloudKit error messages in the Notes app or in Console logs on your Mac.
- Sync failures that persist across multiple software updates.
- Loss of notes after a recent device migration or restore from backup.
Before calling, check iCloud.com in a browser. If your notes are present there, the cloud copy is intact and the problem is local to your device. If they are missing from iCloud.com as well, Apple Support may be able to recover them from server-side snapshots, but only within a limited time window, so do not delay.
FAQ
Why do my new notes not appear on my other devices? The most common reason is that the note was created in the On My iPhone or On My Mac account rather than the iCloud account. Change your default Notes account to iCloud in Settings.
Will signing out of iCloud delete my notes? When you sign out, you are prompted to keep a local copy. Choose Keep on My iPhone to preserve them. After signing back in, they will merge with the iCloud copy.
How long should iCloud Notes take to sync? Under normal conditions, changes appear on other devices within seconds. If sync takes longer than ten minutes, something is wrong.
Can I recover deleted notes? Yes, within 30 days. Open Notes, go to Folders, and tap Recently Deleted. After 30 days, notes are permanently removed.
Does a VPN affect Notes sync? It can. Some VPNs block or slow CloudKit traffic. Disable your VPN temporarily to test.








































