WhatsApp is gearing up to introduce a feature that many have been requesting for years: unique usernames. Instead of relying solely on phone numbers as identifiers, the Meta-owned messaging giant will allow you to pick a handle that others can use to connect with you without needing your digits. This shift represents one of the most substantial changes to WhatsApp’s core identity model since its inception, migrating from a phone-number-only approach toward a hybrid system that more closely resembles its competitors, like Telegram and Signal.
The discovery of this under-development feature first surfaced thanks to WABetaInfo, which spotted references to “usernames” in the iOS TestFlight beta 25.17.10.70. Although the feature isn’t visible in the beta app just yet, hidden strings suggest WhatsApp engineers are actively crafting the interface where users can pick—and later modify—their handles. In their write-up on May 30, 2025, WABetaInfo noted that the username system is specifically designed to hide phone numbers from new contacts, meaning that anyone who doesn’t already have your number will see your unique handle instead of a string of digits.
To prevent confusion and maintain a uniform look across millions of usernames, WhatsApp has laid out a strict set of rules governing what’s allowed. Usernames can’t start with “www.” so as not to mislead people into thinking they’re interacting with a website; they must contain at least one letter (and character length is limited to between 3 and 30 characters), ruling out handles composed entirely of numbers or symbols; and only lowercase letters (a–z), numbers (0–9), periods (.), and underscores (_) are permitted. These constraints ensure a predictable structure, helping both WhatsApp and its users keep abuse and impersonation to a minimum.

Once you’ve settled on a valid username, WhatsApp will celebrate the move to pseudonymous communication with a confetti animation, signaling that the transition away from phone-number dependence is complete. From that moment on, whenever someone without your number starts a chat or sees you in a group conversation, they’ll see your username instead of your phone number. For users who have guarded their digits closely—or share their phone with family or roommates—this will be a welcome layer of privacy.
Of course, usernames aren’t set in stone. Should you decide to adopt a new handle down the line, WhatsApp plans to drop a system message into any active conversations to alert participants of the change, mirroring how it currently handles updates to profile photos or phone numbers. This approach balances transparency (so people know who they’re talking to) with the flexibility to rebrand or refresh one’s online identity periodically.
Privacy buffs will also appreciate that WhatsApp intends to add a username availability checker to its web client, allowing users to verify—and reserve—their desired handle before anyone else beats them to it. This echoes the signup flow on platforms like Instagram or X (formerly Twitter), where checking whether @yourname is already taken is an integral first step. By integrating this functionality into web.WhatsApp.com, the company is acknowledging that many users will want to claim their name quickly, especially if they have a following on other social platforms.
Beyond just the username itself, WhatsApp is already exploring ancillary features, such as a “Username PIN” to help curtail unwanted spam or unsolicited messages from people who add you via handle alone. This PIN system could work similarly to how some platforms require you to approve phone-number-based chats—adding an extra barrier that makes it harder for bots or trolls to bombard you simply because they have your username.
When we compare WhatsApp’s impending username rollout to features already on rival services, it’s clear the app is playing catch-up. Telegram and Signal have offered usernames for years, letting users communicate without revealing phone numbers; Discord has levers like discriminators (#1234) to maintain unique identities; and even Snapchat ditched Snapcodes and usernames early on in favor of contact-card digging. In that context, WhatsApp’s pivot comes a little late, but the platform’s two billion-plus user base means that even a slight nudge toward privacy can have massive ripple effects.
Historically, WhatsApp’s “phone-number-only” paradigm served to keep sign-up friction low—you typed your number, got an SMS code, and you were in. But over the years, that reliance on phone numbers has become a privacy sore point. It forced users to expose personal contact info in group chats with strangers, business inquiries, or online transactions. By decoupling identification from phone numbers—while still requiring them under the hood for verification—WhatsApp aims to preserve the on-boarding simplicity it’s known for, yet offer a more modern, privacy-forward communication experience.
For those eagerly awaiting this change, the timeline remains somewhat nebulous. WABetaInfo has confirmed that the feature is still “under development” and hasn’t been activated even for beta testers, suggesting there’s substantial engineering work still to be done before a public release.
When usernames do finally arrive, it won’t just be a cosmetic change. Businesses that use WhatsApp for customer support or sales will now be able to display a branded handle instead of a number, streamlining catalog links and chatbot interactions. Creators and community managers will gain the ability to publish their handle on social media or websites without prompting a direct call or message to their personal line. Wholesale, the addition of usernames is poised to transform how users perceive and use WhatsApp—shifting it from a straightforward phone-centric messenger to a more versatile, handle-based platform.
In the meantime, expect chatter across social networks and tech forums as users speculate on their dream handles—perhaps a truncated version of a name, or a reference to their niche hobby. And once the feature rolls out, don’t be surprised if you see notifications popping up in your existing group chats noting @YourOldHandle has become @YourNewHandle, complete with confetti animations and perhaps an influx of friend requests from those who can’t resist the username craze.
All told, WhatsApp’s move to usernames is both overdue and promising. It shows the platform recognizing that, in 2025 and beyond, users want privacy options without forsaking convenience. When usernames finally launch, it will mark a pivotal moment in WhatsApp’s evolution—one that could redefine how 2 billion people think about sharing personal information in digital conversations.
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