Iremovalra1n !exclusive! Access

Unlike software-based jailbreaks that patch the kernel remotely, iRemovalRa1n operates in two distinct phases:

| Device | Chip | Status | |--------|------|--------| | iPhone X | A11 | Full Support (Untethered) | | iPhone 8 / 8 Plus | A11 | Full Support (Untethered) | | iPhone 7 / 7 Plus | A10 | Full Support (Untethered) | | iPhone 6s / 6s Plus | A9 | Full Support (Untethered) | | iPhone SE (1st gen) | A9 | Full Support (Untethered) | | iPad (5th & 6th gen) | A9/A10 | Partial Support | | iPod Touch (7th gen) | A10 | Full Support | iremovalra1n

On compatible devices (A5–A11 chips), iRemovalra1n supposedly uses the checkm8 bootrom exploit to gain low-level access, then rewrites specific system partitions to “clear” jailbreak traces or bypass Apple’s activation servers. However, independent security researchers have not verified its inner workings. Some versions appear to be repackaged checkra1n scripts with a custom GUI and additional payloads. As of late 2024 and 2025, the jailbreak

As of late 2024 and 2025, the jailbreak scene is shifting toward and KFD (Kernel File Descriptor) exploits. iRemovalRa1n suffers from a critical problem: untethered jailbreaks require a kernel exploit that survives a reboot. This is a hardware-level limitation of the Checkm8

As mentioned, using iRemovalRa1n on an iPhone X running iOS 16 will permanently break Face ID and Apple Pay. This is a hardware-level limitation of the Checkm8 exploit on A11 devices, not a bug in iRemovalRa1n.

: It is compatible with iOS 12 through iOS 14.8.1 . Newer versions like iOS 15 or 16 typically require different tools like Palera1n.

: Once in DFU mode, the tool will automatically inject the exploit. Your device screen will show a wall of text (the verbose boot) before restarting into a jailbroken state. Important Considerations