Technology / Apple Why iOS 9 Users Are Getting High Bills Users may want to shut off Wi-Fi Assist By Neal Colgrass, Newser Staff Posted Sep 28, 2015 4:00 PM CDT Copied Customers try out a new Apple iPhone 6S at an Apple store on Chicago's Magnificent Mile, Friday, Sept. 25, 2015, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato) If you're using iOS 9 and your data rates are reaching new highs, watch out for an otherwise-useful feature called "Wi-Fi Assist." It automatically allows your phone to download data via your cellular plan when Wi-Fi coverage isn't great, ZDNet explains, which is fine—but can lead to high bills if, say, your office Wi-Fi is poor. You can turn it off at Settings > Cellular (called Mobile Data in certain areas) by scrolling to the bottom of the page for the toggle. (A Gizmodo blogger and iPhone user suggests you do so.) You can also go to Settings > Cellular to see how much data you've already consumed this month, Quartz notes. Some users have already found surprises there: I usually use 1-2GB of mobile data a month, this month I’m up to 7. I suspect iOS 9 wifi assist, anybody else?— Jim Ray (@jimray) September 24, 2015 Pretty certain ios9's "wifi assist" is responsible for my last huge 4g data bill. http://t.co/NNFRkX7kgn— Dan Walsh (@travors) September 24, 2015 See how crazy sales are for the new iPhone 6S and 6S Plus. (More Apple stories.) Report an error