WhatsApp Is Hiding Phone Numbers — Here’s What Every Marketer Needs to Know
For years, WhatsApp’s greatest gift to marketers wasn’t its massive reach or its sky-high engagement rates. It was something far more practical: the phone number. Every time a user joined WhatsApp, their mobile number became a universal key — one that unlocked CRM records, powered retargeting lists, stitched together attribution models, and kept chatbot flows running smoothly.
That key is about to be taken away.
From June 2026, WhatsApp will allow its users to interact entirely through a username — with no phone number visible or required. For everyday users, this is a welcome privacy upgrade. For performance marketers who’ve built entire growth engines on top of phone-number-based data flows, it’s a disruption that most teams haven’t even begun to plan for.
This article breaks down exactly what’s changing, which parts of your marketing stack are at risk, and what you should do about it before the deadline hits.
What WhatsApp Is Actually Changing
The update isn’t a single switch being flipped. It has two distinct layers — one that touches consumers, and one that touches businesses. Both of them land squarely on your desk as a marketer.
Layer 1: Usernames for Consumers
WhatsApp users will soon be able to create a unique public handle — think @atul.jain or @preeti.garge — and use it in place of their phone number. Anyone who has that username can reach them directly; their actual mobile number stays hidden from view.
This is an opt-in feature, so it won’t sweep through the user base overnight. But expect adoption to accelerate quickly, especially among younger users and in markets where data privacy concerns are growing. If your campaigns rely on phone number collection through WhatsApp opt-in forms, the number of users willing to share their digits is about to get smaller.
Layer 2: The BSUID — What Businesses Get Instead
This is the part that most of the coverage around this update glosses over — and it’s the part that matters most to you.
When a user chooses to hide their phone number, businesses lose the ability to use that number as an identifier. WhatsApp’s replacement is called the BSUID — a Business-Scoped User ID. It’s a unique, anonymised identifier that WhatsApp assigns to each user on a per-business basis.
Here’s how it works in practice:
- When you receive a message from a username-only user, your WhatsApp Business inbox shows you a BSUID instead of a phone number. A different business talking to the exact same user will receive a completely different BSUID. Neither of you can cross-reference the user’s identity. But within your own conversation thread, the identifier is persistent — so your automation and CRM can still track the interaction, just without a phone number attached.
The BSUID is deliberately designed to protect user privacy. It prevents cross-business tracking. But for marketers, it also means that phone-number-based matching — the glue holding your WhatsApp workflows together — simply stops working for any user who opts into usernames.
What Breaks in Your Marketing Stack
Let’s get specific. Here’s a breakdown of which tools and workflows are affected, and how severely:
| System / Workflow | Before June 2026 | After June 2026 (for opted-in users) |
|---|---|---|
| CRM matching | Match contact via phone number | Must map BSUID to contact record |
| WhatsApp chatbots | Identify user from incoming phone number | Must accept and store BSUID as primary key |
| Retargeting audiences | Upload phone number lists as custom audiences | Phone lists won’t match username-only users |
| Click-to-WhatsApp Ads | Lead’s number captured on first message | Number hidden; BSUID is your only identifier |
| Attribution | Phone number used to link ad → CRM → conversion | Attribution chain breaks without BSUID integration |
| Broadcast lists / outbound | Send campaigns to phone number lists | Only reachable users are those who messaged you first (BSUID acquired) |
⚠ The Attribution Problem Is the Biggest One
Of all the issues above, attribution is where the damage will be felt most acutely. Imagine a user who sees your WhatsApp ad, starts a conversation, and later converts — but never shared their phone number because they opted into usernames. Under your current setup, that conversion will appear as untracked. For anyone optimising return on ad spend, that’s not a reporting inconvenience — it’s a real gap in the data you’re making decisions with.
What This Means for Click-to-WhatsApp Campaigns
Click-to-WhatsApp (CTWA) ads have become one of the fastest-growing performance ad formats across India, Brazil, and Southeast Asia. Their appeal is simple: the moment a user taps the ad and sends a message, you’ve captured a live, active lead. The phone number that arrives with that first message has been the backbone of your downstream tracking ever since.
- “The phone number was never just a contact detail. It was your attribution anchor. Remove it, and you sever the thread that connects ad spend to revenue.”
Once the username update rolls out, a portion of users who engage with your CTWA campaigns will arrive in your WhatsApp Business inbox with a BSUID and nothing else. If your CRM, customer data platform, or attribution tool isn’t set up to ingest and store BSUIDs as first-class identifiers, those leads will simply fall through the cracks.
Here’s the silver lining: the BSUID doesn’t change between sessions. It’s a stable, persistent identifier for every conversation you have with a given user. If you start treating it the way you currently treat a phone number — as the primary key for that relationship — you can still maintain lead scoring, nurture sequences, and lifetime value tracking. The data is just less portable than before.
The Opportunity Most Marketers Are Missing
Here’s the part of this story that most people aren’t telling: this update is also an opening for brands that move quickly and strategically.
Branded Usernames Are First-Mover Territory
WhatsApp is allowing businesses to claim branded usernames. The brands that act early will secure handles like @YourBrand before competitors get there. A clear, recognisable username makes you easier to discover, simpler to share word-of-mouth, and more trustworthy in markets where WhatsApp impersonation scams are increasingly common.
Opt-In Volumes Will Likely Increase
When users no longer have to give up their phone number to start a conversation with a brand, the perceived barrier drops. That means more people at the top of your funnel will be willing to engage. Yes, your identifier is weaker — but a larger, warmer pool of conversations is a worthwhile trade if your nurture flows are properly built out.
Privacy-Forward Positioning Is a Real Differentiator
In markets where data trust is becoming a genuine purchase driver, explicitly communicating how you handle customer data — that you work within WhatsApp’s BSUID framework and don’t attempt to cross-reference phone numbers — can be a meaningful brand signal. It’s a differentiator that most brands haven’t even thought to make yet.
The Bottom Line
WhatsApp’s move to usernames isn’t a minor UI tweak — it’s a structural change to how identity functions across the world’s largest messaging platform. The phone number has been a load-bearing wall in your WhatsApp marketing stack. Meta is removing it, and offering a privacy-first replacement that is deliberately less powerful from a tracking standpoint.
Marketers who treat this as a compliance checkbox — update the CRM field, move on — will quietly lose attribution visibility and lead data quality without fully understanding why their numbers are slipping.
Marketers who get ahead of it — rebuilding their stacks around BSUID early, claiming their branded usernames, and using the increased opt-in volume to grow their top-of-funnel — will be the ones who look back on June 2026 as an advantage rather than a setback.
The question isn’t whether this change is happening. It is. The question is whether your marketing stack will be ready when it does.
