SideLinQ for iPhone & iPad
A native iOS app is in development. Auto-connect, widgets, push notifications, and seamless system integration — all in one app.
Planned features
Auto-connect
Automatically connects on launch and reconnects when the network changes.
Push notifications
Get notified about subscription expiry, new locations, and important updates.
Widget
Quick connect/disconnect right from your home screen or lock screen widget.
System integration
Native iOS integration with Settings, Shortcuts, and Focus modes.
No third-party client
No need for HAPP or other apps — everything in one native application.
Use SideLinQ right now
While the iOS app is in development, you can get your link via Telegram and connect using HAPP.
Connect via Telegram →Common questions
When will it launch? +
Do I need to repay? +
What iOS version is required? +
Other platforms
What the iOS app is meant to solve
This page is not just a placeholder for a future launch. It should explain what SideLinQ for iPhone and iPad is for, who it is for, and why a native app matters. On iOS, people expect connection management to feel built into the system: quick access from the home screen, predictable reconnect behavior, and a simple path from subscription to actual secure access. That is exactly what this product page is meant to communicate.
The native app is being designed to remove friction from the current setup flow. Instead of thinking about external clients and manual steps every time, users should be able to open one app, connect in a couple of taps, and keep using the same SideLinQ subscription they already have. Push notifications, widget support, and system-level integration are valuable here because they make secure access feel like part of the device, not an extra tool layered on top.
What you can use right now
While the iOS app is still in development, the working path already exists through the Telegram bot and HAPP. Users can get their personal connection link in Telegram, import it into the client, and start using SideLinQ immediately. That means the service itself is not “coming soon” — only the native iPhone and iPad app experience is.
This is important both for users and for search visibility. Someone landing on this page from a query like “SideLinQ for iPhone” or “secure access app for iPad” should understand two things quickly: there is already a working way to connect today, and the future native app will reuse the same subscription instead of forcing a second account or a separate purchase flow.
Who this page is for
This page helps people who are specifically looking for SideLinQ on iOS, a secure access app for iPhone, or a cleaner alternative to manual mobile setup. Instead of a thin “coming soon” stub, it now explains the expected iOS experience, the current Telegram-based fallback, and how the future app fits into the overall SideLinQ product.
That makes the page more useful in practice and stronger from an SEO perspective. It can now answer more intent around iPhone, iPad, Telegram setup, and native app expectations without overpromising launch timing.