If you have ever handed your phone number to someone you were not entirely comfortable sharing it with — an online seller, a delivery agent, a new colleague — just so they could reach you on WhatsApp, this update is going to feel overdue.
WhatsApp is working on a username feature that will allow users to create a unique, searchable handle — something like @yourname — that others can use to find and message them without needing a phone number at all. The feature works similarly to how usernames function on Instagram and Telegram, and it is expected to launch across the platform for its global user base in the coming months.
Here is what changes, and why it matters.
What Is Actually Changing?
Right now, your WhatsApp account is built entirely around your phone number. To chat with someone new, you have to exchange numbers. To add someone to a group, their number becomes visible to every other member. To deal with a business contact or a stranger for a one-off task, your personal number goes with the territory.
The username feature changes that core dynamic. Once it rolls out, every user will be able to create a unique username. That username can be shared instead of a phone number, allowing people to connect and chat without either person ever knowing the other’s mobile number. Your number stays yours. Completely private, unless you choose to share it separately.

5 Benefits Worth Knowing About
1. Your phone number stays private
This is the most immediately useful change for most people. When you join a new group, interact with someone from an online marketplace, or connect with a temporary contact for any reason, your 10-digit mobile number stays completely hidden. The other person only sees your username. No unwanted calls, no number saved somewhere you did not intend, no risk of it being shared further without your knowledge.
2. Safer interactions with strangers and service providers
Think about how often you share your WhatsApp number with delivery staff, service technicians, online buyers and sellers, or people you have met briefly. In each of those cases, your personal number goes to someone who probably only needs to reach you once or twice. A username handles that interaction without permanently exposing your identity. Once the task is done, the username is all they ever had.
3. Better for small businesses and freelancers
Business owners, freelancers, and content creators already use Instagram and Telegram usernames professionally — sharing a clean @handle with clients instead of a personal number. WhatsApp now enters that same space. If you run a home business, do freelance work, or sell anything online, having a professional WhatsApp username separate from your personal number changes how you present yourself to clients and customers. It also strengthens your brand recognition.
4. Easier to remember and share
Phone numbers are ten digits long and easy to mistype. Usernames are short, memorable, and personal. Telling someone your username in conversation is simpler than dictating a number, and the chances of a typo sending your message to the wrong person drop considerably.
5. Reduces spam and fake number problems
Wrong numbers happen. Fake numbers happen. Number-based spam happens constantly. A username system makes it easier to verify that you are connecting with the right person, and it makes certain forms of spam — where bad actors buy or scrape phone numbers — significantly less effective.
Three Things to Keep in Mind When It Launches
Claim your username early. Usernames are unique — only one person can hold any given handle. The same rush that happens every time Instagram or Telegram introduces a new feature will happen on WhatsApp. If you have a name, brand, or handle you want, move quickly when the feature goes live.
Watch out for impersonation. Fake accounts mimicking brands, celebrities, and institutions are already a problem on Telegram. WhatsApp will face the same issue once usernames arrive. Before trusting any account based on its username, look for additional verification — blue tick, linked business profile, or confirmation through a known channel.
Check your privacy settings regularly. Creating a username does not automatically secure everything on your profile. Your profile photo, status, and last seen are governed by separate settings. After setting up your username, take five minutes to review what is visible to whom — and update those settings to match what you are actually comfortable with.
Similar Read: WhatsApp Username Feature Explained
WhatsApp has over two billion users globally, and the phone number has always been both its strength and its limitation. It made the app instantly accessible — everyone already had a number — but it also tied personal identity to every interaction in a way that created genuine privacy concerns over time.
The username feature does not replace the number-based system. It sits on top of it, giving users a choice about what they share and with whom. That choice is long overdue, and for the hundreds of millions of people who use WhatsApp for both personal and professional communication, it genuinely changes how the platform works in everyday life.
No official launch date has been confirmed yet. Keep an eye on WhatsApp’s official update announcements — and when it drops, get your username before someone else does.

