Use AssistiveTouch on iPad
With AssistiveTouch on iPad, you can adapt the touchscreen to fit your needs. If certain gestures don’t work for you, replace them with a tap or alternate gesture, or use a simple sound. You can also use AssistiveTouch when you need to press iPad buttons. You can use AssistiveTouch without any accessory or with a compatible adaptive accessory (such as a joystick).
You can use AssistiveTouch to perform actions such as the following:
Go to the Home Screen
Double-tap
Perform multifinger gestures
Perform scroll gestures
Activate Siri
Access Control Center, notifications, the Lock Screen, or the App Switcher
Adjust the volume on iPad
Shake iPad
Take a screenshot
Use Apple Pay
Speak screen
Adjust dwell settings
Control Analytics
Restart iPad
Set up AssistiveTouch
Siri: Say something like: “Turn on AssistiveTouch” or “Turn off AssistiveTouch.” Learn how to use Siri.
Or do the following:
Go to Settings > Accessibility > Touch > AssistiveTouch.
Turn on AssistiveTouch. The AssistiveTouch menu button appears on the screen.
To customize AssistiveTouch, tap any of the following:
Customize Top Level Menu: Tap an icon to change its action. Tap or to change the number of icons in the menu. The menu can have up to eight icons.
Single-Tap, Double-Tap, or Long Press: Assign custom actions that run when you interact with the menu button.
Create New Gesture: Add your favorite gestures.
Idle Opacity: Adjust the visibility of the menu button when not in use.
Virtual Trackpad: Turn a small region of the screen into a resizable trackpad. See Use an adjustable onscreen trackpad on iPad.
Confirm with AssistiveTouch: On an iPad with Face ID, use AssistiveTouch to confirm payments with Face ID instead of double-clicking the top button. Or on iPad (10th generation), iPad mini (6th generation), iPad mini (A17 Pro), and iPad Air (4th generation and later), use AssistiveTouch to confirm payments with your passcode instead of double-clicking the top button.
Tip: To quickly turn AssistiveTouch on or off, you can set up the Accessibility Shortcut, then triple-click the top or Home button.
Use AssistiveTouch
When AssistiveTouch is on, tap the AssistiveTouch menu button , then choose an action or gesture.
To return to the previous menu, tap the arrow in the center of the menu. To exit the menu without performing a gesture, tap anywhere outside the menu.
To move the AssistiveTouch menu button, drag it to a new location on the screen.
For a multifinger gesture, do the following:
Pinch and Rotate: Tap Custom, then tap Pinch and Rotate. When the two pinch circles appear, touch anywhere on the screen to move the pinch circles, then drag them in or out to perform a pinch or rotate gesture. When you finish, tap the menu button.
Multifinger swipe or drag: Tap Device > More > Gestures, then tap the number of digits needed for the gesture. When the circles appear on the screen, swipe or drag in the direction required by the gesture. When you finish, tap the menu button.
Control iPad with a pointer device
You can connect Bluetooth® and USB assistive pointer devices, such as trackpads, game controllers, and mouse devices.
Go to Settings > Accessibility > Touch > AssistiveTouch.
Turn on AssistiveTouch.
Below Pointer Devices, tap any of the following:
Devices: Pair or unpair devices and customize buttons.
Mouse Keys: Allow the AssistiveTouch pointer to be controlled using the keyboard.
Pointer Style: Adjust the size, color, and auto-hide settings.
Show Onscreen Keyboard: Display the onscreen keyboard.
Sound on Click: Play a sound when the pointer device is clicked.
Always Show Menu: Show the AssistiveTouch menu when a pointer device is connected.
Tracking Sensitivity: Adjust how quickly the pointer moves when you drag the mouse or your finger on the trackpad.
You can also change the appearance of the pointer.
Set up Dwell Control
iPad performs a selected action when you hold the cursor still on a screen element or an area of the screen.
Go to Settings > Accessibility > Touch > AssistiveTouch, then turn on Dwell Control.
Adjust any of the following:
Fallback Action: Turn on to revert the dwell action to the selected fallback action after performing an operation.
Movement Tolerance: Adjust the distance the cursor can move while dwelling on an item.
Hot Corners: Perform a selected action—such as take a screenshot, open Control Center, activate Siri, scroll, or use a shortcut—when the cursor dwells in a corner of the screen.
Time needed to initiate a dwell action: Tap or .
Use simple sounds to perform gestures
With AssistiveTouch, you can have iPad perform a gesture or other action when you make a simple sound, such as a mouth pop or an S-sound.
Go to Settings > Accessibility > Touch > AssistiveTouch, then turn AssistiveTouch on.
Tap Sound Actions, then tap a sound.
Select the gesture or other action you want performed when you make the sound.
To perform the gesture or action, just make the sound.
Create custom gestures
You can add gestures you use often (such as touch and hold or two-finger rotation) to the AssistiveTouch menu. You can even create several gestures with, for example, different degrees of rotation.
Go to Settings > Accessibility > Touch > AssistiveTouch > Create New Gesture.
Perform your gesture on the recording screen. For example:
Touch-and-hold gesture: Touch and hold your finger in one spot until the recording progress bar reaches halfway, then lift your finger. Be careful not to move your finger while recording, or the gesture will be recorded as a drag.
Two-finger rotation gesture: Rotate two fingers on the iPad screen around a point between them. (You can do this with a single finger or stylus—just create each arc separately, one after the other.)
If you record a sequence of taps or drag gestures, they’re all played back at the same time. For example, using one finger or a stylus to record four separate, sequential taps at four locations on the screen creates a simultaneous four-finger tap.
If your gesture doesn’t turn out quite right, tap Cancel, then try again.
When you’re satisfied with your gesture, tap Save, then name the gesture.
To use your custom gesture, tap the AssistiveTouch menu button , tap Custom, then choose the gesture. When the blue circles representing your gesture appear, drag them to where you want to use the gesture, then release.