Digital Key Not Working
















Last edited by kjb55; Mar 5, 2026 at 03:49 PM.
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I can start the car with the watch or phone in massive entry mode easily. Using NFC mode is more complicated than it should be. I've come to expect a quick tap in NFC mode like I experience with digital payments. When I tested starting the car with the iPhone using NFC mode, placing the iPhone onto the charging pad didn't work for me. I had to slide the phone backward so that the top of the phone was in the middle of the charging pad. It took multiple attempts for it to be able to see the digital key, but I was able to start the car.
I haven't tried starting the car with the Apple Watch in NFC mode. I wear the watch on my left wrist. The Watch passcode needs to be entered after the watch is placed on the wrist for the key to work. I figured that unnatural contortions would be required to touch the middle of charging pad with the wrist on my left hand. In a pinch, I could put the watch on the right hand before starting the car.
I haven't tested unlocking and starting the car in low power mode. Apple does claim that it is possible. With the watch, I would think that you would not be able to take it off and put it on the RFID charging pad, because then the passcode authentication on the Watch would no longer be valid and the Watch would not be able to use the digital key until the passcode was entered.
I got into a similar weird situation when trying to start the car with the phone in NFC mode. The phone would try to do facial recognition and request double tapping of the side button while the phone was in the charging tray. I had to pull the phone from the tray, double click the side button, do facial recognition and then put the top of the iPhone 16 Pro around the middle of the pad, and move it around until the message on the driver display said the car was looking for a key.
I can start the car with the watch or phone in massive entry mode easily. Using NFC mode is more complicated than it should be. I've come to expect a quick tap in NFC mode like I experience with digital payments. When I tested starting the car with the iPhone using NFC mode, placing the iPhone onto the charging pad didn't work for me. I had to slide the phone backward so that the top of the phone was in the middle of the charging pad. It took multiple attempts for it to be able to see the digital key, but I was able to start the car.
I haven't tried starting the car with the Apple Watch in NFC mode. I wear the watch on my left wrist. The Watch passcode needs to be entered after the watch is placed on the wrist for the key to work. I figured that unnatural contortions would be required to touch the middle of charging pad with the wrist on my left hand. In a pinch, I could put the watch on the right hand before starting the car.
I haven't tested unlocking and starting the car in low power mode. Apple does claim that it is possible. With the watch, I would think that you would not be able to take it off and put it on the RFID charging pad, because then the passcode authentication on the Watch would no longer be valid and the Watch would not be able to use the digital key until the passcode was entered.
I got into a similar weird situation when trying to start the car with the phone in NFC mode. The phone would try to do facial recognition and request double tapping of the side button while the phone was in the charging tray. I had to pull the phone from the tray, double click the side button, do facial recognition and then put the top of the iPhone 16 Pro around the middle of the pad, and move it around until the message on the driver display said the car was looking for a key.
With the watch in low-power mode, the doors did not unlock with NFC. I went into the MB app on my watch to unlock the doors remotely.




With the watch in low-power mode, the doors did not unlock with NFC. I went into the MB app on my watch to unlock the doors remotely.
I am surprised that the doors did not unlock with NFC and the watch in low-power mode. The remote unlock with the app on the phone or watch is always a good backup. So you were able to enter the car. Were you able to start it?



