Can Police Make Me Unlock My Phone?
They generally cannot force you to reveal your passcode — courts treat that as protected testimony under the Fifth Amendment. Face ID and fingerprint are murkier: courts are split, and some allow police to compel them. A passcode gives you the strongest protection.
There are two separate questions here: can police search your phone, and can they make you open it? On searching, the answer is clear — they generally need a warrant (Riley v. California). On forcing you to unlock it, the answer splits along a surprising line: what you know versus what you are.
What the Law Says
- Your passcode is generally protected. Courts widely agree that forcing you to reveal a passcode, pattern, or password is testimonial — it uses the contents of your mind — so the Fifth Amendment generally shields it. Police usually cannot compel you to tell them your code.
- Biometrics are a legal gray area. Face ID, fingerprint, and iris unlock are treated differently, and courts are split. Some courts protect them like a passcode; others — including the Ninth Circuit — have allowed police to compel a fingerprint, comparing it to booking-stage fingerprinting.
- The “foregone conclusion” exception. If the government can already show, with reasonable particularity, that specific evidence exists on the device, a court may sometimes compel unlocking even of a passcode-protected phone.
An Everyday Example
An officer holds your phone up to your face to unlock it with Face ID. In some courts that is allowed; in others it is challenged as a Fifth Amendment violation. But if your phone requires a passcode you have to type, police generally cannot force you to enter or reveal it.
What This Means for You
Because passcodes get the strongest and most consistent protection, a passcode is more protective than face or fingerprint unlock — and most phones let you quickly disable biometrics (so the phone demands the code). Either way, remember: searching the contents still generally requires a warrant, and you can always say, “I do not consent to a search of my phone.”
Read the Official Law
The actual text, straight from the official government source:
Go Deeper Into the Law
Read the full text and a clear breakdown of the law behind this answer:
Sources
- Fifth Amendment, U.S. Constitution — Protects against compelled self-incriminating testimony, including revealing a passcode.
- Riley v. California (2014) — Police generally need a warrant to search a phone's contents.
Confused by the legal wording? The CivicShield app explains the law in everyday language for your exact situation.
Get AI-Powered Answers →