Unlock Hidden iPhone Settings to Take Full Control of Your Apps

Imagine your iPhone adapting to each app you open — text that’s always the right size, buttons you can spot at a glance, and a steady cursor that never blinks — all without touching your system-wide settings. It sounds like magic, but it’s all thanks to a tucked-away feature.

With Per-App Settings (introduced in iOS 15), you avoid the one-size-fits-all trap: Mail can have larger text while Instagram can stay at standard size. You can get cross-fading transitions in the Notes app while preventing your Home Screen and App Switcher from getting crazy slow. And you can boost contrast in a photo editor without affecting your widgets or Lock Screen.

In iOS 18, you get two updates: hidden apps aren’t left out in the cold, and you can fine-tune the cursor’s blinking behavior in every text-enabled app.

Below, you’ll learn how to add visible and hidden apps to Per-App Settings, tweak every available preference — including the new cursor controls — and remove apps when you want to revert to defaults. Keep reading to give each app on your iPhone exactly the look and feel you need. (These instructions also work for iPadOS.)

Why per-app settings matter on your iPhone

Adjusting text size, bold text, or contrast for your whole iPhone can lead to inconsistencies — some apps ignore system settings, while others end up looking distorted. Per-app settings solve this by letting you tailor only the apps you choose. For instance:

Adding apps to customize

In the Settings app, navigate to Accessibility » Per-App Settings. Then, tap “Add App” to open the searchable app list, which includes Apple and third-party apps, plus system items like Home Screen & App Library and Siri. However, you won’t find any hidden apps here, such as Code Scanner, Print Center, Diagnostics, Field Test, or Remote. Live Captions was an option, but it was removed in iOS 18 since it has a dedicated configuration menu in Settings.

If you want to tweak an app you’ve hidden, a feature available since iOS 18, tap “Show Hidden Apps” and authenticate yourself to have them appear in the list.

Find and tap the app you want to customize, and it will immediately appear in the Per-App Settings list. That means you can only add one app at a time. If you want multiple apps, repeat these steps for each one.

Configuring each app’s preferences

Once an app is listed under Per-App Settings, tap its name to reveal all available options. If it’s an app you’ve hidden, tap “Show Hidden Apps” and authenticate yourself to have them appear in the list.

Each option offers Default, On, and Off choices, except Larger Text, which shows a slider with an option to “Reset Font Size to Default,” and Auto-Play Animated Images, which is just a toggle switch.

While all options will be available for all apps, they won’t all apply to the app you’re customizing. For example, toggling off Auto-Play Animated Images for Messenger won’t prevent GIFs from auto-playing in Facebook chats, but if you turn it off in Messages, you’ll have to press play on GIFs to view them in action.

When you choose Default for an option, it uses the default preference set system-wide. For instance, if you have Reduce Motion enabled for all of iOS, that will be the default, and you can turn it off in specific apps.

Here’s what each setting does:

Tip: Always test changes by opening (or force-quitting and reopening) the app after you toggle a setting. Some apps may require a relaunch before you see any of the adjustments you’ve made.

See it in action

Below, you can see what happens when you enable Bold Text, Larger Text, and Smart Invert for Home Screen & App Library. Here are a few things you’ll notice if you try a similar configuration:

When you switch to another app, those tweaks vanish — keeping all other apps at their standard appearance. That is unless you see the status bar in the app or pull down Control Center or Notification Center, which will retain the changes.

For an app like Safari, changing text boldness will affect the app’s UI elements, like the address bar, menu settings, tab switcher, bookmarks, history, and start page, but it may also affect some text on webpages. Increasing or decreasing the text size will also affect all of those UI elements, but it won’t do anything to webpages or their Reader views since Safari has its own built-in text resizer for that.

Removing apps from Per-App Settings

If you decide you no longer need custom tweaks — or if an app update resets things unexpectedly — remove it to revert to system defaults:

  1. Go to Settings » Accessibility » Per-App Settings.
  2. Tap “Show Hidden Apps” and authenticate if necessary.
  3. Long-swipe left on the app name you want to delete or short-swipe left and tap “Delete” when it appears.
  4. Alternatively, tap “Edit” at the top, then tap the minus (–) icon next to the app and confirm with “Delete.”

Removing the app resets every preference (text size, bold text, contrast, etc.) back to defaults, which is a lot faster than trying to change each option manually for the app.

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