Unbite app icon

Shoo away
the buzz

Mosquitoes ruining the moment? One tap and let your phone handle the buzz — no sprays, no smell, no fuss.

Download on the App Store

This app is an experiment, not a substitute for proven mosquito protection. Requires iOS or iPadOS 26 and later.

Quietly clever, calmly simple

A thoughtful little utility that lives in your pocket — ready whenever the buzzing starts.

Sound, generated live

Crisp, high-frequency tones that may disurb* mosquitoes.

Three modes for any moment

Indoor, Outdoor, or Silent. Pick what fits, switch anytime.

Always in your pocket

Ready whenever you need it — on the balcony, camping, or in bed.

Unbite running on an iPhone

Built to feel right

Every screen, sound, and animation was shaped with intent. The kind of polish you feel more than you notice.

Clutter-free

No ads, no pop-ups, no distractions.

Private by design

Everything happens on device and nothing ever leaves it.

Liquid Glass

Built natively with Apple's Liquid Glass design. It looks and feels exactly at home on your iPhone or iPad.

Hands-free with Siri

Just ask Siri to start or stop. No need to reach your phone.

Live Activity

See what's playing at a glance in the Dynamic Island and on your Lock Screen.

Widgets

Control the app with widgets and controls.

* Some studies suggest certain frequencies may disturb mosquitoes, so this app lets you experiment with different modes in your own space. Be aware that the science is mixed and unsettled. Effect depends on the species, the season, and your phone's speaker. This may help in some situations and do nothing in others.

Depending on the tone you choose and your hearing, you or others nearby may hear it. Lower settings are audible to almost everyone, while higher ones are heard mainly by children and younger adults.

Pets are far more sensitive to high-frequency sound than people — dogs and cats can hear every tone in this app, including the ones you can't. If you have animals nearby, choose a lower setting and watch for any signs of discomfort. If anyone in the room finds the sound unpleasant, lower the volume, switch to a different mode, or turn it off.