WhatsApp opened username reservations globally on June 29, 2026, letting its more than three billion users claim a handle before the full feature launch expected later this year.
Quick Summary – TLDR:
- WhatsApp began accepting username reservations on June 29, 2026, ahead of the full feature launch planned for later in the year.
- The platform has more than 3 billion users, according to WhatsApp, making early reservations essential to prevent widespread name conflicts at launch.
- Users can reserve a username in seconds, per WhatsApp, via Settings > Account > Username on the latest version of the app.
- An optional username key, per WhatsApp, requires others to know both the username and the key before they can send a message.
- Creators already building audiences can carry their existing Instagram or Facebook username directly into WhatsApp.
What Happened?
WhatsApp has begun rolling out username reservations for users around the world. The new feature allows people to claim a unique username that can later be used instead of a phone number when connecting with others on the platform.
The company says the feature is designed to improve privacy and give users more control over who can contact them, especially in situations where sharing a personal number may feel uncomfortable.
your phone number is personal and sometimes you want to connect without handing it over. that’s why we’re introducing usernames for WhatsApp.
— WhatsApp (@WhatsApp) June 29, 2026
starting this week, you can reserve a username to use later this year when we launch the feature. It takes just a few seconds, make sure…
Privacy by Design: No Directory, No Discovery
WhatsApp said “there’s no directory to browse and no suggestions – people will need to know your exact username to contact you for the first time.” That design separates WhatsApp usernames from the public-discovery mechanics on Instagram or TikTok, where a handle is findable through search. WhatsApp’s approach treats a username as a credential shared deliberately, not a profile found through browsing.
WhatsApp recommended that for most users, “choosing a WhatsApp username should be something unique that only people you want to contact you will know.” That framing pushes the username closer to a private code than a public handle, aligning with broader shifts toward private messaging over broadcast social feeds.
The Username Key: A Second Contact Gate
WhatsApp introduced an optional username key – an additional credential that others must know before they can send a message. Users can regenerate the key at any time, which effectively revokes access from anyone who held the previous key without requiring a username change.
Once usernames fully launch, new contacts “will no longer see your phone number, if you enabled your username.” That changes a default in place since WhatsApp’s founding: every conversation has required a phone number exchange. Users who spend significant daily time on messaging platforms now gain an identity layer that keeps their number out of new contacts’ hands.
Name overlap at scale made early reservations necessary, according to WhatsApp.
Reserving a username takes just a few seconds. The users have to navigate to Settings > Account > Username on the latest version of WhatsApp.
SQ Magazine’s Takeaway
WhatsApp said its more than three billion users mean a lot of names will overlap. Giving creators a path to claim their existing Instagram or Facebook username on WhatsApp builds cross-platform identity consistency before the launch rush.
WhatsApp’s optional username key is the most technically interesting piece: it creates a functional two-factor gate on first contact, helping reduce unsolicited-message risk, with a regeneration option that revokes access without requiring a username change. Adoption is the open question for 2026: the platform’s value has always been phone-book simplicity, and opt-in settings add friction alongside their real privacy gains.