What does a white tick signify?

What does a white tick signify? - briefly

A white tick indicates that the profile has been officially confirmed as authentic by the platform, usually reserved for public figures, brands, or notable entities. It signals that the account’s identity has passed the service’s verification process.

What does a white tick signify? - in detail

A white check‑mark next to a communication entry is a status indicator that the item has left the sender’s device but has not yet reached the recipient’s inbox or been opened. The exact meaning varies by platform, but the core concept remains the same: the message is in transit.

  • WhatsApp (standard version): a single grey tick means the server has accepted the message; a double grey tick indicates delivery to the recipient’s phone; a double blue tick confirms the message was opened. In some customized themes the delivered ticks appear white, serving the same purpose as the grey double tick.
  • Telegram: a single check‑mark (often displayed in a light colour) shows the message was sent to the server; a double check‑mark, usually darker, confirms delivery to the recipient’s device.
  • Signal: a single check‑mark in a neutral tone denotes server receipt; a second check‑mark, rendered in a brighter hue, signals that the recipient’s device has received the message.
  • iMessage: a single white bubble with a check‑mark appears when the message is successfully transmitted to Apple’s servers; a second check‑mark, shown in a darker shade, indicates delivery to the target device.
  • Email clients with read‑receipt features: a small white tick beside an outgoing email often signals that the message has been dispatched to the mail server; a coloured or filled tick appears once the server confirms delivery.

When a white tick is present without a subsequent coloured or filled counterpart, the message may still be awaiting network connectivity, the recipient’s device may be offline, or the platform’s delivery confirmation is pending. The indicator does not guarantee that the content has been viewed; it only confirms successful transmission to the next point in the delivery chain.