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Learn how to adjust your screen sensitivity & set up touch accommodations
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If you're having trouble with your iPhone or iPad's touchscreen, you may find it helpful to increase or decrease touch sensitivity. You can adjust the amount of time needed to register your touch, ignore multiple touches (if your hands are shaky), and set up many touch-specific accommodations in your Accessibility settings. This wikiHow teaches you how to adjust your iPhone or iPad's screen sensitivity.

Using Touch Sensitivity

Touch sensitivity is an iPhone feature that lets you control how long you have to press on something before it opens or displays. On an iPhone with 3D Touch, this option is called 3D and Haptic Touch. You can change the setting through your iPhone's accessibility settings.

Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Adjusting Touch-and-Hold Timing

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  1. It's in the third group of settings. [2]
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  2. It's under the "Physical and Motor" header. [3]
  3. This is the feature that controls how long it takes to reveal menus, previews, and other features when you tap-and-hold an item on the screen.
    • If you have an iPhone with 3D Touch, this option is called 3D & Haptic Touch . See this method to learn how to adjust your 3D Touch settings.
  4. The default option is "Fast" –if you find that tapping an app icon or link often opens up a menu or special feature instead of opening the app or link you intend to open, select Slow instead. [4]
    • The new setting will take effect immediately.
    • You can switch back to the Fast default at any time by tapping Fast on this screen.
  5. Tap and hold the image of the flower at the bottom of the screen. If the setting is set to "Fast," the image should grow larger right away. If it's set to slow, it will take about 2 seconds for the image to expand.
    • Swipe down on the larger image to return to the menu.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Adjusting 3D Touch Settings

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  1. It’s the gray gear icon on the home screen or in the app library.
    • 3D Touch is the feature that makes your touch register differently depending on how much pressure you apply to the screen. [5] It's only available on iPhones, and only on the following models: iPhone Xs & Xs Max, iPhone X, iPhone 8 & 8 Plus, iPhone 7 & 7 Plus, iPhone 6s & 6s Plus.
  2. It's in the third group of settings.
  3. It's under the "Physical and Motor" header.
  4. This opens your touch sensitivity settings. [6]
  5. If you don't want your iPhone to behave differently based on the amount of pressure you apply to the screen, toggle the 3D Touch switch to the off position. If you want to keep the feature on but change its sensitivity, continue to the next step.
  6. 3D touch is activated when your finger does something other than simply tapping an app icon or link, such as bring up a menu or start jiggling the desktop icons. This slider controls how much pressure you need to apply to the screen to activate 3D Touch. [7]
    • If you're often accidentally bringing up menus or other features instead of opening apps and links, you might try the Firm setting—this requires more pressure on the screen to activate 3D touch.
    • If you find it difficult to activate 3D touch when you need it, try the Light option, which requires less pressure.
    • Use the Medium setting if the other two are too extreme.
  7. Tap the image at the bottom of the screen as you normally would. If you see a "Peek and pop" preview of the image, 3D touch is activated. If it activates too quickly, choose the Firm setting.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Using Touch Accommodations

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  1. It’s the gray gear icon on the home screen or in the app library. [8]
    • Touch Accommodations are extremely helpful for fine-tuning your iPhone or iPad's screen sensitivity. If you have trouble keeping your finger in one place or moving quickly enough, you're sure to find what you're looking for here.
  2. It's in the third group of settings. [9]
  3. It's under the "Physical and Motor" header. [10]
  4. It's near the middle of the menu. [11]
  5. It's at the top of the screen. When the switch is green, Touch Accommodations are active.
  6. Hold Duration determines how long you must keep your finger on the screen before your touch is recognized. If your hands are shaky and you find yourself opening apps and features you don't mean to open, you can increase this setting. Here's how: [12]
    • Tap the switch next to "Hold Duration" to turn the feature on.
    • The default duration is .10 seconds, which is nearly instantaneous. You can tap the plus symbol to increase the hold duration if you feel your screen is too sensitive. The amount of time you select here is how long it will take for your touch to register.
      • The setting will take effect immediately. If you find that you're tapping the plus symbol and it's no longer doing anything, tap and hold it on the minus sign instead—you've probably just increased the duration a bit too high for your liking.
  7. If you don't have a steady hand and often tap apps and links more than once by accident, this is the feature for you. Here's how to use it: [13]
    • Toggle the "Ignore Repeat" switch to the on (green) position.
    • Tap the plus sign to increase the time allowed between multiple touches. The default is 0.10. Raising this value higher makes it so your iPhone or iPad will register your multiple accidental touches as one as long as they occur within that amount of time.
  8. This feature is called Tap Assistance, and it's at the bottom of the menu.
    • Tap Use Initial Touch Location if you have a hard time keeping your finger in one place on the screen and find that your iPhone or iPad is registering your touch in the wrong place.
    • Tap Use Final Touch Location to ignore the first touch on the screen, and then only register the place your finger was when you lifted it off the screen. This feature allows you to touch and hold your finger anywhere on the screen, drag it to the place you actually want to tap, and then lift your finger.
  9. After setting up your preferences in Touch Accommodations, you can temporarily disable them at any time by tapping the switch at the top of the screen. This will not erase any of your special settings, but may make it easier for someone else to use your iPhone or iPad if needed. Otherwise, you can keep this switch in the On position so your settings remain active at all times.
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  • Question
    Can you calibrate your iPhone screen?
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    This answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    The iPhone touchscreen’s auto-brightness sensor can be calibrated or you can restore the factory settings. These methods for calibrating the iPhone screen can be found here: How to Calibrate an IPhone Screen.
  • Question
    How do you change the sensitivity on Twitter?
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    This answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    Assuming you are referring to sensitive material: Go to your profile icon in the top right navigation bar. Choose Settings, then go to Privacy and Safety settings. Under the Tweet media section, select the box next to mark media you tweet as potentially sensitive. (Source: Twitter Help)
  • Question
    How do I change the sensitivity of my Android touchscreen?
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    This answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    For the Android touchscreen, go to Settings, then tap Language and Input. Scroll down to Pointer Speed. Swipe the slider upward to make the touchscreen more sensitive. Tap OK to save the new settings, then check to see how it works for you. Adjust as necessary.
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      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      1. Open Settings .
      2. Tap Accessibility .
      3. Tap Touch .
      4. Tap Haptic Touch .
      5. Select a Touch Duratoin.

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