Is it possible to have an Apple watch with a phone number and pair that with an iPad Mini and not have an iPhone involved at all? My daughter is getting old enough to need a phone but she is ADHD as all get out and will most likely put it down and lose it. So I like the idea of a watch that is strapped to her and then an iPad Mini for when she needs more.
Yes, it's really arbitrary and really annoying. I'd love to use exactly that combo instead of a cell phone, considering the iPad could very easily do it if they wanted it to, but the OS is different and you can't.
@conciselyverbose@AnotherPerson I wish this was something they changed with the iPad getting the Health app in iPadOS 17. That’s the only hold up besides being annoying by forcing one to own an iPhone that I could have thought of
With Family Setup, your family member who doesn't have their own iPhone can use their Apple Watch to do things like make phone calls, send messages, and share their location with you.
After you set up a watch for a family member, you can use your iPhone to manage some of the watch's capabilities.
Note that some Apple Watch features depend on having a companion iPhone, and aren't available on an Apple Watch that you pair using Family Setup.
Honestly just buy an old one secondhand. You don't have to use it - it just has to occasionally be near the watch. Put it in your daughter's bedside table or something.
The hardware on the Apple Watch isn't capable of a few important tasks, like installing software updates. It needs to be near an iPhone that it's paired to for those to happen.
I don't recommend using the "family member" feature - it severely limits the feature set of the watch. Instead setup the phone in your daughter's name, with a proper Apple ID that you create for her. Don't give her the passcode to unlock the phone until she's older.
As for losing a phone, iPhones have an extremely robust system for finding lost or stolen devices. It even continues to function (for weeks) after the battery goes flat. And it can pop up a notification on your watch if you leave it behind at an unfamiliar location (leave your iPad at home... all good. Leave it at the airport, you'll be alerted within a couple minutes). This feature alone is probably a good enough reason for your daughter to be all in on the Apple ecosystem. There are other features too.
You kinda can, as long as someone in your household with an iPhone can set up the watch for your daughter as a family member. Someone has to have an iPhone in order to deal with setup and any access control and some features won’t be available without a companion iPhone, but it might be sufficient for your daughter’s needs. Then she can sign into the same iCloud account on the iPad. I can’t speak to how well it’ll behave between those two devices on the same iCloud account and how well anything like handoff or continuity will work because I haven’t had need to try it, but if you wanted her to have a watch and no phone I think this is the only way to do it right now.