Share IPhone Calendar Step By Step-easier Than You Think
How to share an iPhone calendar step by step
To share an iPhone calendar, open the Calendar app, tap Calendars, select the iCloud calendar you want to share, tap the info button, choose Add Person, enter a contact's name or email, and send the invite; if you want anyone to view it, turn on Public Calendar and share the link instead.
What Apple actually supports
Apple's calendar sharing is built around iCloud calendars, not every calendar on the device, and the people you invite need the right account setup to accept it. Apple also distinguishes between private sharing with specific people and public sharing with a URL, which is useful when you want read-only access rather than collaboration.
Step-by-step sharing
- Open the Calendar app on your iPhone.
- Tap Calendars at the bottom of the screen.
- Find the iCloud calendar you want to share and tap the info button next to it.
- Tap Add Person.
- Type a name or email address, or pick someone from your contacts.
- Tap Add to send the invitation.
Permission settings
After someone is added, you can manage whether they can edit the calendar or only view it, depending on the calendar-sharing options available on your device. Apple's guidance also shows that shared calendars can be stopped later from the calendar settings, which matters if plans change or access should be revoked.
| Sharing method | Who can access | Best for | Access type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Private invite | Specific people you choose | Family, team coordination, shared planning | Invite-based |
| Public Calendar | Anyone with the link | Read-only publishing | Link-based |
What to know before you start
A shared Apple calendar is not the same as a shared event, and private events are not designed to stay hidden inside a shared calendar view in the way many users expect. If you need a truly private block of time, Apple community guidance suggests placing that event in a separate calendar that is not shared.
"Your contacts must have an email address to share an iCloud calendar."
Common problems
- If you do not see the share option, make sure the calendar is an iCloud calendar and not a local one.
- If the other person cannot join, confirm they have a valid email address tied to their contact info.
- If you want someone to stop seeing the calendar, remove them from the shared list or stop sharing entirely.
- If you need one-time visibility for a schedule, use a public link only when read-only access is acceptable.
Private versus public sharing
Private sharing is the safer default because it limits access to the people you invite, while public sharing creates a link that can be forwarded more easily. In practical terms, private sharing is better for family logistics, workplace coordination, and recurring plans, while public sharing is better for broadcasting availability without giving editing rights.
Quick decision guide
Choose private sharing if you want collaboration, editing control, and a closed audience. Choose public sharing if you only need others to view the calendar and do not mind distributing a link.
FAQ
Everything you need to know about Share Iphone Calendar Step By Step Easier Than You Think
Can I share an iPhone calendar with Android users?
Yes, but the most reliable option is usually the public calendar link for read-only access, while private invitations depend on account compatibility and email acceptance.
Can I hide certain events on a shared calendar?
Not cleanly inside the same shared calendar; Apple user guidance says the better workaround is to create separate private calendars for events you do not want shared.
How do I stop sharing a calendar?
You can remove specific people from the shared calendar or stop sharing it altogether from the calendar management options.
Do invited people need an iCloud account?
For private iCloud calendar sharing, Apple requires the recipient to have a usable email address, and the invite is handled through Apple's sharing flow.
What is the difference between sharing a calendar and sharing an event?
Sharing a calendar gives someone access to the whole calendar, while sharing an event only invites them to a single meeting or appointment.