Use Reference Mode on your iPad Pro

The Liquid Retina XDR display and Ultra Retina XDR display on your iPad Pro can display reference color for popular color standards, as well as SDR and HDR video formats.

What is Reference Mode?

Reference Mode is a display mode for professional content creation workflows, like color grading, editing, and content review, where accurate colors and consistent image quality are critical.

To use Reference Mode, you need:

When Reference Mode is on, your iPad Pro displays reference color for these common color standards and video formats, up to 1,000 nits peak brightness for HDR and 100 nits peak brightness for SDR:

Reference Mode enables your iPad Pro to match the color requirements of your workflow. It targets a D65 white point and disables all dynamic display adjustments for ambient surround, like True Tone, Auto-Brightness, and Night Shift. You can also adjust the white point and luminance manually. Unsupported formats are color managed as they would be in the default display mode.

You can also use Reference Mode with SideCar to create a consistent reference workflow across your iPad and Mac.

Reference Mode might affect battery life.

Turn Reference Mode on or off

  1. Open the Settings app, then tap Display & Brightness.

  2. Tap Advanced.

    An iPad showing the Display & Brightness settings.
  3. Turn Reference Mode on or off.

Use Fine-Tune Calibration

Use Fine-Tune Calibration to maintain the reference color accuracy of your display by adjusting the white point and luminance. Input the values that you measure using an external instrument and test pattern. iPadOS automatically adjusts the display to match your white point and luminance target.

  1. Open the Settings app, then tap Display & Brightness. Then tap Advanced, and make sure that Reference Mode is on.

    An iPad showing the Advanced Display & Brightness settings. Reference Mode is on.
  2. Use an external instrument to measure a test pattern. Note the values you measure.

  3. Go back to the Settings app, then tap Display & Brightness. Tap Advanced, then tap Fine-Tune Calibration.

    An iPad showing the Fine-Tune Calibration settings, where you can adjust the measured and target white point and luminance.
  4. Tap the space next to each setting to enter a value. Enter the values you measured in the Measured fields. Enter your target values for white point and luminance in the Target fields.

  5. When you're finished, tap Done. Your iPad Pro display will adjust to match your white point and luminance target.

Here are the descriptions of what to enter in the Measured and Target fields:

To remove any previously applied Fine-Tune Calibration, tap Restore Defaults.

Download test patterns

You can use QuickTime movie test patterns from Apple to evaluate the calibration of your iPad Pro. These appropriately color-tagged references allow you to use your in-house measurement instrument to fine-tune the white point and luminance calibration of your display.

  1. Go to the AVFoundation Developer page.

  2. In the Related Resources section, click Color Test Patterns to download the test files.

  3. In the Files app, decompress the QuickTime-Test-Pattern.zip archive. Each set of test patterns includes a Reference Values.txt file that lists the expected chromaticity and luminance for each test pattern.

Only the following QuickTime test pattern sets are recommended for iPad Pro:

Check your setup and environment

When measuring a test pattern and fine-tuning your display:

Range limits for Fine-Tune Calibration

If your desired target value is outside the displayed range

It might be a result of one or more of the following:

Use Reference Mode with Sidecar

Requires a Mac with Apple silicon

If you're using Sidecar to extend or mirror your Mac desktop to your iPad Pro, you can turn on Reference Mode to use your iPad Pro as a secondary reference monitor:

  1. On your iPad, turn on Reference Mode.

  2. On your Mac, choose a reference preset. You can use one of these presets (with the corresponding color standards and video formats that are supported by Reference Mode in parentheses):

    • HDTV Video (BT.709)

    • NTSC Video (BT.601 SMPTE-C)

    • PAL & SECAM Video (BT.601 EBU)

    • Internet & Web (sRGB)

    • HDR Video (HDR10 BT.2100 PQ, BT.2100 HLG Dolby Vision Profile 8.4, Dolby Vision Profile 5)

  3. Move a Mac window to your iPad.

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