Apple’s iCloud service gives you easy and automatic backups of your iOS devices.
You never have to connect your device to your computer, but your stuff
is still safe. When backups don’t work though, you’ll need to
troubleshoot it. No need to get that upset, we have some solutions | Shutterstock
Make Sure Your Device is Backing Up
iPads and iPhones should warn you if they haven’t backed up to iCloud
in a few weeks. It won’t do this if you don’t first configure your
device for iCloud backup. Some people just assume it is there
automatically, but you still need to configure it. Other times backups
just messed up, so it’s worth a check.
Head over to Settings->iCloud and make sure Backup is set to On. That doesn’t mean your device backed up though. Under Back Up Now the last backup should be within the last few days. For iCloud backup to work (according to Apple) you need to make sure:
•Your device has continuous power.
•It’s connected to the Internet through Wi-Fi.
•The screen is locked.
The typical problem I see is hotels with password gateways.
You’re connected to Wi-Fi, but you’re not connected to the Internet.
You’ll need to put in a special password on the “capture page” for your
iPhone or iPad to connect to the Internet.
If it hasn’t backed up in a while and you meet all three of those conditions, tap Back Up Now. Your iPhone or iPad should finish the backup and your problem is solved.
When in Doubt, Turn it On and Off Again
This works for both the iOS and your iCloud backup. First, toggle your iCloud Backup setting to Off. Then toggle it back on. Tap Back Up Now
and see if the backup completes. If not, toggle the backup off and then
turn off your iPad or iPhone completely. This is a complete Slide to Power Off not just putting the device to sleep.
After the troublesome device reboots, try turning on the backup
again. It just might work! If that still doesn’t work, try signing out
of your iCloud account. Go to Settings->iCloud-> Sign Out.
After you sign out, Apple techs tell me it is best to sign into another
account to clear out the data. Apple warns you the data on the Phone
will be removed. Since it is in iCloud, it will come back again. You can
sign in with nonsense data by using a random name and password. I use letmein as both the username and password . It won’t log you in, but it still clears out some of your old stuff.
Reboot your iPhone or iPad and then sign out of the fake account. Then sign into the correct account and reboot yet again.
Delete the Old Backup on iCloud
Sometimes a backup can get stuck on iCloud’s end and you need to start from scratch. Just to play it safe, you’ll want to do a manual backup directly to iTunes.
You won’t be erasing data on your iPad or iPhone but you will be
deleting a backup from iCloud. Since you’ll lose one backup, it is time
to create another.
After your iTunes backup, go to your device and go to Settings->iCloud->Storage->Manage Storage. There you’ll see a list of devices. Tap the device and then tap Delete Backup. Apple
warns you that this deletes the backup data from the servers. It won’t
delete stuff synced to iCloud like pictures and contacts. After you
delete the backup, you’ll need to turn the backup back on.
iCloud remembers old devices you backed up to it. If you replaced an old device, you can safely delete iCloud’s backup of it.
When I had this problem recently, a backup on Apple’s servers
wouldn’t delete. No matter what I did, there was a stuck backup related
to the device. Apple was able to delete the backup on their end.
Make Sure You Aren’t Backing Up Too Much Stuff
If you don’t have enough room in your iCloud account, the backup may
not complete. iOS should warn you that is the reason the backup won’t
complete. In my experience, it doesn’t always do that, especially if
you’re close to the edge in account size. Other times part of the glitch
is Apple thinks you’re backing up too much stuff even when you aren’t.
You can tell iCloud to backup less of your stuff for troubleshooting
purposes. If you’ve reduced your backup size and still don’t have iCloud
space, then the problem isn’t a space issue.
Want to save space on your iCloud backups? Here are 5 useful tips.
Check For Network Problems and Reset Them
If you have a slow upload speed on your Internet connection, the
backup may be timing out. If you’re on someone else’s connection (like
at work), the backup could be blocked.
Try a different network environment and see if that makes a
difference in the backup speed. If all of this doesn’t work, you might
need to reset your network settings. This causes your iPhone or iPad to
forget all previous wireless networks, so you’ll have to join them again
(and possibly remember passwords). Go to Settings->General->Reset->Reset Network Settings and put in your passcode. After that, reboot your iPad or iPhoneand then try the backup again.
Restore Your iPhone or iPad
As a last resort, you may have to erase your device and restore from
backup. If you do a backup in iTunes, you can then restore everything.
That process is time-consuming, but it works in even the most difficult
scenarios. You’ll need to put your iPhone or iPad into recovery mode to do this. Restore Mode: ON | Flickr
You might just let this problem slide and not fix it. If you ever lose your iPhone or iPad though, you’ll have trouble restoring your data. That’s why you want to get this fixed as soon as possible.