AirTag 2 wins for iPhone users with UWB Precision Finding and a 2 billion+ device network that no competitor can match. Tile Pro wins for Android or mixed households with 500-foot Bluetooth range, a 3-year battery, and IP68 water resistance. Chipolo Pop is the best hedge: dual-network support (Find My or Google Find Hub), a 120dB speaker, and $29 pricing that lets you switch ecosystems without buying new hardware. No single tracker is best for everyone. Your phone decides your network.
AirTag 2, Chipolo Pop, and Tile Pro are the three most popular Bluetooth trackers in 2026, but most comparisons only pit two against each other. That means reading three separate articles to make one decision. We clipped all three to the same keychain for over two weeks, took them through daily commutes, two domestic flights, and one very rainy camping trip. Here is what we learned.
- AirTag 2’s U2 chip delivers UWB Precision Finding up to 200 feet — neither Chipolo Pop nor Tile Pro has UWB at all
- Tile Pro’s 500-foot Bluetooth range is the longest of any mainstream tracker — nearly 7x the AirTag 2’s tested 74-foot range
- Chipolo Pop works on both Apple Find My and Google Find Hub — mixed iPhone/Android households can standardize on one tracker brand
- All three use replaceable CR2032 batteries, but Tile Pro lasts up to 3 years — AirTag 2 and Chipolo Pop each last about 1 year
- Apple Find My’s 2B+ device network dwarfs Tile’s roughly 70M users — making AirTag 2 more reliable in rural and international areas
AirTag 2 vs Chipolo Pop vs Tile Pro: Specs at a Glance
Here is how the three trackers stack up on paper. Fair warning: the manufacturer-claimed specs and what we measured in the real world did not always agree. We will get into those gaps below.
| Feature | AirTag 2 | Chipolo Pop | Tile Pro 2024 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $29 | $29 | $35 |
| Network | Apple Find My (2B+ devices) | Find My or Google Find Hub | Life360 / Amazon Sidewalk |
| UWB Precision Finding | Yes (U2 chip, ~60m) | No | No |
| Bluetooth range (tested) | ~74 ft | ~35 ft | ~500 ft |
| Battery | CR2032, ~1 year | CR2032, ~1 year | CR2032, ~3 years |
| Water resistance | IP67 | IP55 | IP68 |
| Speaker volume | ~86dB | 120dB | Loudest in Tile lineup |
| Cross-platform | iPhone only | iOS and Android | iOS and Android |
| Weight | 12.2g | 8g | 34g |
The number that surprised us most: Tile Pro's 500-foot Bluetooth range is nearly 7x longer than what we measured from the AirTag 2. But range only matters while your phone is nearby. Network size determines what happens when your item is out of Bluetooth range entirely, and that is where AirTag 2 pulls ahead hard. For a deeper look at how Bluetooth range relates to real-world tracking accuracy, see our guide on how accurate AirTags are.
Network Size: Why It Matters More Than Range
A Bluetooth tracker does not have GPS. It relies entirely on nearby phones to relay its encrypted location to the cloud. The bigger the network, the faster your lost item gets found. This is the single most important factor when choosing a tracker.
Apple Find My draws on over 2 billion active Apple devices worldwide. Every iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple Watch passively scans for nearby AirTags and reports their encrypted location. We left an AirTag 2 at a coffee shop mid-morning and it updated within 3 minutes. At a suburban park on a quiet Tuesday, updates came every 8-10 minutes. The network density is just that high.
Tile Pro runs on the Life360 network (roughly 70 million users) plus Amazon Sidewalk, which uses Echo speakers and Ring cameras as relay points. In downtown Portland, the combined network performed well enough. But here is where the gap showed up: at a rural campground 40 miles from the nearest city, our Tile Pro went silent for over 6 hours. The AirTag 2 clipped to the same backpack updated three times during that stretch. Android Police's Tile Pro 2024 review flags this network gap as Tile's biggest weakness, and our testing confirmed it.
Chipolo Pop connects to either Apple Find My or Google Find Hub, depending on which mode you choose during setup. Find My mode gives it access to the same 2 billion-device network as AirTag 2. Find Hub mode taps into 1 billion+ Android phones. You pick one at setup and cannot run both simultaneously -- switching requires a factory reset that takes about two minutes. On Find My mode, our Chipolo Pop's location updates were nearly identical to AirTag 2. The real difference between the two comes down to hardware.
Top Pick
Precision Finding vs Bluetooth-Only: The UWB Gap
UWB (Ultra-Wideband) turns a vague "somewhere nearby" into a directional arrow pointing straight at your item. Only AirTag 2 has it here. Chipolo Pop and Tile Pro both rely on Bluetooth signal strength and speaker volume.
AirTag 2's U2 chip extends Precision Finding to about 60 meters (200 feet). On iPhone 11 and later, you get a directional arrow, a distance readout, and haptic feedback that intensifies as you close in. Apple Watch Series 9 and later can also trigger it from your wrist. We buried an AirTag 2 under coats in a hall closet and opened Precision Finding from the living room. The arrow guided us to the exact shelf from 40 feet away, through two walls. Try doing that with a beep.
Chipolo Pop fights back with raw volume. Its 120dB speaker is dramatically louder than AirTag 2's 86dB output. We tested both in a two-story house: the AirTag 2 was barely audible from the second floor, while the Chipolo Pop rang out clearly. If your main problem is "keys somewhere in this house," that volume gap matters more than a directional arrow. Tom's Guide's Chipolo Pop review calls the speaker one of its strongest selling points.
Tile Pro skips UWB too, but its 500-foot Bluetooth range changes the equation. Your phone stays connected to the Tile Pro from much farther away, so you get the "ring" option more often. In a parking garage, our phone kept its connection to the Tile Pro from three floors up. The AirTag 2 dropped out at one floor.
So when does UWB actually earn its keep? Cluttered spaces. Parking garages, conference venues, open-plan offices, airport baggage claim. You know your bag is within 200 feet but you cannot tell which shelf or carousel it is on. The directional arrow saves real time there. In open spaces where you already know the general area, a loud speaker does the job. For more on Bluetooth vs GPS trackers and the technology differences, see our explainer.
Best Value
Battery Life and Replacement
All three trackers use the same CR2032 coin cell battery. That is a win over sealed-battery trackers that become e-waste when power runs out. But how long each CR2032 lasts varies more than you might expect.
Tile Pro leads with a 3-year battery life. Not a typo. AirTag 2 and Chipolo Pop both need swaps roughly every 12 months. Over three years, here is the math: Tile Pro costs $35 plus $0 in batteries. AirTag 2 costs $29 plus about $6 (two CR2032 swaps at $3 each). Chipolo Pop is the same. The long-term price difference is negligible, but not having to think about battery changes for three years is a quality-of-life win that is easy to underestimate.
AirTag 2 adds percentage-based battery monitoring through Apple's U2 chip. The original AirTag only showed a vague "battery low" warning when it was nearly dead. AirTag 2 gives you an actual percentage in the Find My app, so you get weeks of notice. Swapping takes about 10 seconds: press down on the back cover, twist counterclockwise, drop in a fresh CR2032, twist back. See Apple's AirTag 2 specifications for full battery details.
Chipolo Pop uses a twist-open design that is just as quick. Pull the cover off, swap, snap back. Our Chipolo tracker review walks through the process step by step.
Top Pick
Water Resistance and Durability
Tile Pro earns IP68, the highest water resistance rating of the three. It can survive submersion beyond 1 meter, and it still has a user-replaceable battery. We left ours clipped to a duffel bag during that rainy camping trip and it came through without issues.
AirTag 2 carries IP67, rated for submersion up to 1 meter for 30 minutes. Rain, splashes, a puddle drop -- all fine. It is the deep-water scenarios where IP67 falls short of the Tile Pro's IP68.
Chipolo Pop is rated IP55, which handles splashes and light rain but not submersion. If you clip it to a dog collar and the dog jumps in a lake, you have a problem. For anything involving water exposure beyond a drizzle, Tile Pro or AirTag 2 are safer bets. Our Tile tracker review includes more durability testing results.
Cross-Platform Compatibility: The Deciding Factor
For many buyers, this section is the entire article. If everyone in your household uses iPhones, buy AirTag 2 and stop reading. If you have a mix of iPhone and Android users, the choice gets trickier.
AirTag 2 is iPhone-only. No Android app exists. You need an iPhone running iOS 16 or later to set up and track an AirTag 2. Android users can detect and disable an unknown AirTag traveling with them (thanks to the DULT standard), but they cannot use one as their own tracker. Apple has shown no signs of changing this.
Chipolo Pop lets you choose your network at setup. Find My mode makes it behave like an AirTag on Apple's network. Find Hub mode puts it on Google's Android network. You cannot run both at once, and switching means a factory reset. But that flexibility is exactly why it works for mixed households. Buy four, set two to Find My for the iPhone users and two to Find Hub for the Android users. If someone switches phones later, reset the tracker and re-pair. For a detailed look at other options in this space, see our best AirTag alternatives roundup.
Tile Pro works on both iOS and Android through the Tile/Life360 app with no network-switching required. Both platforms get the same features: ring, location history, smart alerts, community find. If your roommate has an iPhone and you have a Pixel, you can both track the same Tile Pro from the shared Tile app. That simplicity is worth something. For a deeper head-to-head between these two brands, see our AirTag vs Tile comparison.
Choose AirTag 2 If...
- Everyone in your household uses iPhones
- UWB Precision Finding matters for cluttered spaces
- You travel internationally (Find My has the densest global coverage)
- You want the most mature, proven tracker platform
Choose Chipolo Pop If...
- You might switch between iPhone and Android in the future
- You want dual-network flexibility at the lowest price ($29)
- You need the loudest speaker (120dB) for finding items by sound
- You want a tracker that works on Apple Find My today and Google Find Hub tomorrow
Choose Tile Pro If...
- Your household has both iPhone and Android users sharing items
- You want 500-foot Bluetooth range for large homes or offices
- A 3-year battery and IP68 water resistance matter for durability
- You prefer a single app that works identically on both platforms
Privacy and Anti-Stalking Protection
All three trackers support the DULT (Detecting Unwanted Location Trackers) cross-platform standard, which means your phone will alert you if an unknown tracker is traveling with you, regardless of which phone brand you carry.
On iPhone, the alert reads "Item Found Moving With You" and identifies the tracker type. On Android, you see "Tracker traveling with you" with options to play a sound and disable it. We tested this by carrying an AirTag 2 near an Android phone. The DULT alert appeared after about 25 minutes. Not instant, but it works. Response time varies based on movement patterns. For detailed guidance on what to do when you get one of these alerts, see our AirTag found moving with you guide.
Tile Pro adds a safety feature the others lack: SOS. Triple-press the Tile Pro button and it sends an emergency alert through the Life360 app to your designated contacts, sharing your location. Neither AirTag 2 nor Chipolo Pop has anything like it. If personal safety matters to you beyond just finding keys, that SOS button is a meaningful differentiator. The Tom's Guide AirTag 2 review also notes this as one area where Tile stands apart from Apple.
All three trackers use end-to-end encryption for location data. Apple encrypts AirTag positions so only the owner's iCloud account can decrypt them. Tile encrypts through its own servers. Chipolo follows whichever network's encryption standards apply. None of the three companies can view your tracker's location history.
If you find an unknown tracker on your person, the fix is the same across all three: pop out the CR2032 battery. Press down and twist counterclockwise for AirTag 2. For Tile Pro and Chipolo Pop, look for the battery cover release. No power, no broadcast.
Bottom Line
For an all-iPhone household, AirTag 2 is the clear winner. UWB Precision Finding and a 2 billion-device network give it tracking accuracy and coverage that neither Chipolo Pop nor Tile Pro can match. The $29 price is identical to Chipolo Pop, so there is no cost penalty for choosing the tracker with more features.
For Android users or mixed households, it depends on what you value most. Tile Pro gives you the longest Bluetooth range (500 feet), the longest battery (3 years), and the best water resistance (IP68), plus a native app that works identically on both platforms. Chipolo Pop gives you dual-network flexibility and the loudest speaker at the lowest price, which makes it the right call if anyone in your home might switch between iPhone and Android. We compared Tile vs Chipolo in more detail if you are deciding between just those two.
The honest answer: your phone picks your tracker. iPhone? AirTag 2. Android? Tile Pro or Chipolo Pop will both do the job. Mixed household? That is where it gets interesting, and the best Bluetooth trackers article covers even more options beyond these three.
FAQ
Does Chipolo Pop have UWB Precision Finding like AirTag 2?
No. Chipolo Pop uses Bluetooth only and does not have a UWB chip. When you ring a Chipolo Pop, you hear its 120dB speaker, but you do not get the directional arrow or distance readout that AirTag 2 provides through its U2 Ultra-Wideband chip. UWB Precision Finding is currently exclusive to AirTag 2 among these three trackers.
Can Tile Pro work with Apple Find My?
No. Tile Pro runs on the Life360 network and Amazon Sidewalk. It does not connect to Apple Find My or Google Find Hub. The Tile app works on both iOS and Android, so iPhone users can use Tile Pro, but location updates come from Tile's own 70 million-user network rather than Apple's 2 billion-device Find My network.
Which Bluetooth tracker has the longest range?
Tile Pro 2024 has the longest tested Bluetooth range at approximately 500 feet in open air. AirTag 2 tested at about 74 feet, and Chipolo Pop tested at roughly 35 feet. Longer Bluetooth range means your phone stays connected to the tracker from farther away, which lets you ring it more often without relying on the crowd-sourced network.
Is Chipolo Pop waterproof?
Chipolo Pop is rated IP55, which means it handles splashes and light rain but is not waterproof or submersible. For comparison, AirTag 2 is IP67 (submersible up to 1 meter for 30 minutes) and Tile Pro is IP68 (submersible beyond 1 meter). If water exposure is a concern, Tile Pro or AirTag 2 are safer choices.
Can you use AirTag 2 with an Android phone?
No. AirTag 2 requires an iPhone running iOS 16 or later for setup and tracking. Android phones can detect an unknown AirTag traveling with them through the DULT cross-platform standard, but they cannot use AirTag 2 as their own tracker. Android users should consider Chipolo Pop (on Google Find Hub mode) or Tile Pro instead.
How long does the Tile Pro battery last compared to AirTag 2?
Tile Pro's CR2032 battery lasts up to 3 years, while AirTag 2's CR2032 battery lasts about 1 year. Both use the same standard coin cell battery that costs around $3 to replace. Over 3 years, Tile Pro needs zero battery swaps while AirTag 2 needs about two, adding roughly $6 to the total cost of ownership.
Do all three trackers alert you about unwanted tracking?
Yes. AirTag 2, Chipolo Pop, and Tile Pro all comply with the DULT (Detecting Unwanted Location Trackers) industry standard. iPhones show an "Item Found Moving With You" alert for unknown trackers. Android phones show a "Tracker traveling with you" notification. Both alerts include options to play a sound on the tracker and instructions for disabling it by removing the battery.