Voicemail transcription (beta) shows your messages transcribed into text. Transcription is limited to voicemails in English received on your iPhone with iOS 10 or later, and transcription depends on the quality of the recording. To view a transcribed voicemail, tap Voicemail in the Phone app.

Deleting all VMs from my iPhone is non-intuitive. I need help figuring this out. Plus, I understand that to fully clear out the mailbox, I have to clear the deleted messages. This is also not intuitive. One option I'm seeing is to call my carrier and ask them to reset the mailbox. Is this, in fact, what clearing all messages requires?


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My wife recently reset her iPhone 4 and lost all of her saved voice mail messages. She was able to retrieve messages from the past month. Though she really wants to recover some messages that were up to a year old. These messages were from her mother who passed away in the end for December. Does anyone have a suggestion on how these can be recovered?

I know this is a very old thread, but do you think my itunes account has to be backed up on the computer to be able to extract voicemails after switching carriers? I think mine is only backed up to the cloud. I lost voicemails from my dad who passed last year

This worked really well for me. I am not affiliated with the company in any way, FWIW. I accidentally deleted all of my voicemails by tapping Clear All when I was in the Deleted Items view - it somehow deleted not only my deleted items, but everything in my inbox. This included precious voicemails from my late father-in-law. I tried a bunch of different ways to restore them (Backup Restore, file system utilities, etc.) with no luck. I decided to try Decipher Voicemail and it totally worked. There is a bug that prevented .amr files from being associated with a new app after I changed the association, but converting to MP3 worked. I also now have local copies of all of my voicemails from my backups on two phones, one of which died a couple of years ago, but I still had the backups.

I just spend the past 3 days in tears because I switched carriers from Verizon to T Mobile, and all of my voicemails were gone. I had several that had a lot of sentimental value to me from family members who have passed. I was completely heart broken after speaking with multiple reps from Verizon, T Mobile, and Apple and they all told me that nothing could be done and the voicemails were gone forever. After reading through this thread, I decided to try iExplorer, as per someone's suggestion. POOF! All of my precious voicemails were on my computer within seconds!!! Thank you so much for the suggestions and I hope this helps someone else. I am so grateful to the makers of this program! ?

I am experiencing the exact same dilemma right now with my girlfriend's iPhone 5s. Switched from VZW to T-Mobile and lost all voicemails as well as very sentimental ones. Did you have to anything special before running the iExplorer app? I'm very interested in trying this... but it seems a little too good to be true.

Usually, Voicemail messages are held in the phone company servers and these messages expire after a certain period of time (usually 14 days with AT&T). These "expired" messages are deleted automatically from the servers at the phone company and they cannot be recovered. The iPhone itself cannot save this messages on its internal memory.

My iPhone 3G was lost or stolen yesterday. I've been saving voicemail messages from my daughter for the past few years (From age 6 to 9). Those messages are gone from the voicemail Cloud now, but have been retained on my phone. Are they saved anywhere on my computer or in iTunes? I've cherished those messages and it breaks my heart if they are gone.

Sentimental messages either, which were accidentally deleted. I believe the only way you can save them is to go into your mobile phones server message bank weekly and save them that way. Once they're saved each time from your servers end, then they are saved forever on your phone. I can't believe that apples iCloud doesn't save them as it saves every bloody thing else.

For the three weeks, I have been repeatedly deleting the same voicemails from my phone. For whatever reason, they have been reappearing despite my efforts to remove them. When deleted, they don't even move to the "Deleted Messages" block. They just reappear hours or minutes later. What's the deal? Who has any info/guidance on this? This is a very new problem so I'm not sure what the cause could be. HELP!!! I'm irked.

When you delete voicemails they must be removed from the carrier's server as well as from the phone. This requires that you have a cellular data connection (Wi-Fi is not sufficient). If they are not removed from the server they will come back when the server and the phone resync. Sometimes the phone and the server can get out of sync. To remedy this log into the carrier's voicemail server and delete them there. The procedure is different from carrier to carrier, but usually you either hold the "1" on the keypad for several seconds, or you call your own number from your phone. You will be prompted for your voicemail password; then follow the prompts to listen to and delete messages.

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Because voicemails are stored by the carrier, voicemail settings are relatively limited on your phone, so if you're having issues with voicemail that you can't seem to solve by troubleshooting, it's probably something your carrier knows how to fix.

The fact that voicemails are typically stored on your carrier's server and not your phone itself is why you have to set up your voicemail again when you switch carriers or get a new phone, and why you're likely to lose them in the process unless they're backed up.

There are two ways to delete voicemails on your phone: either select an individual message and delete it (left) or tap on Edit at the top right corner of the Voicemail tab and select several to delete at once (right). Unfortunately, there is no Select All option.

If you deleted all the messages, you're now staring at a seemingly "empty" inbox, but with a Deleted Messages button. The Deleted Messages is like the cemetery for your deleted voicemails. And it's where you can retrieve them if you accidentally delete one you meant to save. iPhone also stores your deleted photos in the Photos app for 30 days for this reason.

I have voicemail messages in my Deleted folder dating back to January 2019, around the time I got my iPhone XS Max. Mind you, I also switched phone carriers in late 2021, so where are all voicemails stored? Is it just on the carrier's server or the phone as well? It seems that, in my case, most were stored on the phone itself as well.

When I tapped on Deleted Messages, all the voicemails I had deleted in the past 3.5 years were there. Once you're at the Deleted Messages, you can simply tap Clear All to get rid of them all.

Deleting voicemails from your visual voicemail should delete them from the carrier's server, but does it? Verizon says deleting these messages, plus the voicemails on the deleted messages folder on iPhone will permanently erase them and cannot be undone, leading one to infer that the deleted visual VM messages are also deleted from the carrier's servers. If you are concerned about this, I'd recommend a call to your carrier to confirm this is the case.

Unfortunately, there's no straight answer for this, as it varies from one carrier to the next. I had voicemails dating back to January 2019 in both my normal inbox and my deleted messages, so I obviously wondered where they're being stored. Is AT&T storing my messages out of the kindness of its heart after I left it a year ago?

I can't speak with certainty for the messages on the inbox, but it does seem like the deleted messages from my voicemail were stored on my phone. When I switched carriers a year ago, I also changed my phone number but didn't get a new device, and all my old voicemails remained.

Before I started deleting voicemails like I had something to hide, I checked my iPhone storage. You can check yours by going to Settings, then selecting General, then iPhone Storage.

Before deleting all voicemails and then all deleted voicemails, my storage sat at 178.1 GB. After deleting them it dropped to 174.4 GB. I wish I had actually counted my messages before deleting them but with over 3.5 years of voicemails, I am pretty certain I had over 100.

How you call to access traditional voicemail depends largely on the carrier. Some carriers make voicemail available by simply dialing 1, others you have to call a specific number. Typically, just calling your own number from your phone (or your number from another phone and dialing * or #) will give you access to voicemail with sequential playing. 2351a5e196

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