WhatsApp is testing a shift that could fundamentally change how users connect: the introduction of unique usernames. While the Meta-owned platform has long tied every account to a specific phone number, select users are now seeing prompts to set up a unique handle, signaling a move toward a more privacy-focused communication model.
The feature, currently appearing in beta versions of the app, allows users to choose a handle that acts as an identifier. This means people will soon be able to initiate chats without handing out their personal phone numbers. It’s a significant pivot for a service that built its identity on the SIM-card-based verification system.
Privacy advocates have pushed for this change for years. Phone numbers are sensitive identifiers, and for many, sharing them with strangers or businesses poses a security risk. By decoupling the account from the number, WhatsApp is positioning itself to compete more directly with Telegram, which has used username-based contact discovery since its inception.
The rollout remains limited. Not every beta tester has access to the configuration menu, and the company hasn’t released a global timeline for a full, stable release. Those who are currently testing the feature report that the usernames are being reserved on a first-come, first-served basis, creating an immediate scramble among power users to secure their preferred handles.
Technical hurdles remain. The platform must ensure that username discovery doesn’t open the floodgates for spam or harassment from unknown accounts. Meta is expected to implement strict filtering tools, but the challenge lies in balancing open connectivity with the “private-first” reputation WhatsApp has cultivated.
For the average user, the change won’t be immediate. But for those concerned about digital footprints and data privacy, the ability to operate behind a handle—rather than a digit-heavy phone number—is the most significant functional update in the app’s history.
Whether this transition will eventually make phone numbers optional for account creation is still unclear, but the infrastructure for that shift is finally being laid.
