
WhatsApp is finally closing a major privacy gap that's exposed billions of users to unwanted contact. Starting later this year, the messaging app's 3 billion global users will be able to communicate using usernames instead of phone numbers—a shift that fundamentally changes who can reach you without your consent.
Until now, anyone possessing your phone number could contact you on WhatsApp. That's a privacy vulnerability that's plagued the platform for years. Alice Newton-Rex, WhatsApp's vice president of product, framed the change as overdue: "We have designed this as a core privacy feature." She added, "People will need to know your exact username to contact you for the first time."
The move addresses what Meta Platforms, WhatsApp's parent company, acknowledged as "a privacy blind spot." Currently, WhatsApp's privacy protections are thin—users can only block individual contacts or silence unknown callers. A profile name exists, but it's visible only in group chats to people who haven't saved your number. That's not real privacy. It's a Band-Aid on a structural problem.
How the Username System Works
WhatsApp won't create a searchable directory of usernames, and the app won't auto-suggest names as you type. That's crucial. It means you won't be discovered by accident or through algorithmic suggestion. Usernames must be between three and 35 characters long. The company is also reserving usernames for high-profile figures—celebrities, public officials, government entities—to prevent impersonation and the harassment that typically follows.
Newton-Rex acknowledged the rush that's coming. "I think a lot of people will go and get usernames and that's why we decided to open reservations early." Catchy handles are coveted online, and the scramble will be real. Companies, organizations, and creators already on Instagram and Facebook will get first access to claim their WhatsApp usernames, giving established accounts an advantage over ordinary users.
Why This Matters:
For billions of people globally—particularly in Europe, Asia, and the Global South where WhatsApp dominates communication—this change represents genuine progress on digital privacy. Phone number exposure has long enabled harassment, spam, and unwanted contact. It's a structural inequality: those with resources to manage harassment have options; those without don't. By making phone number discovery optional rather than mandatory, WhatsApp shifts the power dynamic. Users gain control over who can initiate contact. The feature won't solve all privacy problems—data collection, surveillance capitalism, and Meta's broader business model remain concerns—but it addresses a concrete vulnerability that's affected billions. Whether the rollout is swift and whether the feature works as promised will determine whether this is meaningful reform or another corporate privacy gesture.