How to disable liquid glass in iOS 26?

Is there a way to completely disable the liquid glass functionality on iOS 26? I'm not going to get into a lengthy diatribe over why it's awful, I just want it gone.

iPhone 13 Pro Max, iOS 18

Posted on Sep 16, 2025 8:14 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Sep 25, 2025 7:02 AM

Zedairder wrote:

The best you’ve got is reduced motion, which I assume you already have enabled.

Also Settings>Accessibility>Display & Text Size>Reduce Transparency and Increase Contrast.


But yeah, definitely not optional!

465 replies

Dec 12, 2025 5:39 PM in response to GrBear

I echo the sentiment here, it is a very un appealing and any efficient design it has created plenty of issues for me personally.


Apple’s iOS 26 “Liquid Glass” redesign is a bad decision not because it looks different, but because it cuts directly against what Apple does best.


Apple’s core promise has always been effortless clarity. You pick up an iPhone and everything is immediately readable, calm, and obvious. Liquid Glass—by design—adds translucency, refraction, motion, and visual noise to core interface elements. That’s spectacle layered on top of information, and it makes the OS harder to read, not easier.


This is especially dangerous for accessibility. Translucent UI over dynamic backgrounds is notoriously bad for contrast, low-vision users, and people sensitive to motion. The fact that Apple has already had to tone it down and add controls to reduce the effect proves this isn’t a polish issue—it’s a fundamental design conflict.


It also introduces unnecessary performance and perception risk. Effects-heavy interfaces make users worry about battery life and older devices, even if Apple optimizes them. Apple upgrades work because users trust that updates improve stability, not just visuals. This redesign weakens that trust.


Then there’s the ecosystem cost. When Apple changes its visual language this dramatically, developers feel pressure to redesign their apps just to keep up—absorbing time and expense with no guarantee users actually want the look.


Most importantly, Liquid Glass sends the wrong signal. Apple wins by being practical, restrained, and human-centered. A flashy, polarizing UI suggests Apple is prioritizing visual novelty over usability at exactly the moment users want reliability and substance.


Apple shouldn’t need an OS you have to “dial back.” If users want to turn it off, it shouldn’t be the future of iOS.

Dec 13, 2025 7:52 AM in response to Mac Jim ID

It’s not a question of liking or disliking the Liquid Glass.

I can’t see the time clearly when I glance at my phone because it has become translucent or transparent rather than opaque and easy to see at a glance.

I don’t understand how this can be called an improvement.

If I’d known that this would be irreversible, I would NOT have updated!!!

Perhaps before the next update Apple users can get a preview of what’s in store, so that they can decide if they want to update or not.

This is very disappointing ☹️

Dec 13, 2025 8:50 AM in response to Adambagley

Adambagley wrote:

I echo the sentiment here, it is a very un appealing and any efficient design it has created plenty of issues for me personally.

Apple’s iOS 26 “Liquid Glass” redesign is a bad decision not because it looks different, but because it cuts directly against what Apple does best.

Apple’s core promise has always been effortless clarity. You pick up an iPhone and everything is immediately readable, calm, and obvious. Liquid Glass—by design—adds translucency, refraction, motion, and visual noise to core interface elements. That’s spectacle layered on top of information, and it makes the OS harder to read, not easier.

This is especially dangerous for accessibility. Translucent UI over dynamic backgrounds is notoriously bad for contrast, low-vision users, and people sensitive to motion. The fact that Apple has already had to tone it down and add controls to reduce the effect proves this isn’t a polish issue—it’s a fundamental design conflict.

It also introduces unnecessary performance and perception risk. Effects-heavy interfaces make users worry about battery life and older devices, even if Apple optimizes them. Apple upgrades work because users trust that updates improve stability, not just visuals. This redesign weakens that trust.

Then there’s the ecosystem cost. When Apple changes its visual language this dramatically, developers feel pressure to redesign their apps just to keep up—absorbing time and expense with no guarantee users actually want the look.

Most importantly, Liquid Glass sends the wrong signal. Apple wins by being practical, restrained, and human-centered. A flashy, polarizing UI suggests Apple is prioritizing visual novelty over usability at exactly the moment users want reliability and substance.

Apple shouldn’t need an OS you have to “dial back.” If users want to turn it off, it shouldn’t be the future of iOS.

Hello~ Do you have a technical question for us?? That is the point of a technical forum. You can contact Apple in many ways (as posted throughout this now 29 page thread) to share your thoughts with them.


~Katana-San~

Dec 13, 2025 8:52 AM in response to Grannybom

Grannybom wrote:

I too DO NOT LIKE the Liquid Glass feature. It adds nothing of value to my phone - in fact it seems blurry. Also, closing out Safari is different. Harder to close out of. No more square at bottom right and then “Xing” out. Why not leave well enough alone?

If you want something which will never change, Walmart has nice simple FlipPhones to sell you. If you want a smart phone, change is inevitable, ongoing and will never stop moving forward. Having been on this forum for more than 15 years, one thing I've learned is many people simply don't adapt well to change. But changes come every year with iOS and adapt to changes we must. If Apple doesn't change things, people will complain that Apple has stopped innovating. And change something and someone like you will object. You can't make everyone happy.


If you don't like Liquid Glass, instead of just responding to the first post of a thread, you might want to take YOUR time to read if there are things you can do to help. I wrote this user tip to help people and if you read it ALL the way through, you may find some simple settings changes can be better for you --> Liquid Glass - Love It Or Hate It - It's … - Apple Community

Dec 13, 2025 9:04 AM in response to Tzotzi

Tzotzi wrote:

It’s not a question of liking or disliking the Liquid Glass.
I can’t see the time clearly when I glance at my phone because it has become translucent or transparent rather than opaque and easy to see at a glance.
I don’t understand how this can be called an improvement.
If I’d known that this would be irreversible, I would NOT have updated!!!
Perhaps before the next update Apple users can get a preview of what’s in store, so that they can decide if they want to update or not.
This is very disappointing ☹️

Hello~ You state “If I’d known that this would be irreversible, I would NOT have updated!!!” All iOS updates are irreversible. The “preview “ was pretty in depth for iOS 26. Do you have a technical question for us??


~Katana-San~

Dec 14, 2025 10:14 AM in response to LeoLee10

LeoLee10 wrote:

Worst update EVER. I wish you could have the option to turn OFF the Liquid Glass completely. Not go through all these steps to “minimize” the effects. I’m older and the movements and clear mess with my eyes and sensitivity.
super disappointed

What does your age have to do with making adjustments, which would suit you better? I'm in my 70s and my other half in their late 70s. We refuse to let age get in our way. But if you're not willing to take advantage of the options which ARE available to you, you'll just have to be disappointed.

Dec 14, 2025 1:29 PM in response to GrBear

I am a person that has visual impairment and this new update has made it impossible. Even when I am seeing OK, all of the blurry looking little glass is not OK. If Apple decided to do an update like this, it should’ve should’ve been a preview of it and we had a choice to update it or not and it not affect us if we didn’t. You need to come up with a resolution to get rid of the liquid glass and whatever else that’s hogging the battery life ever since this update or you will see many iPhone users like myself becoming android users.

Dec 14, 2025 1:38 PM in response to Yohonlp

Yohonlp wrote:

I am a person that has visual impairment and this new update has made it impossible. Even when I am seeing OK, all of the blurry looking little glass is not OK. If Apple decided to do an update like this, it should’ve should’ve been a preview of it and we had a choice to update it or not and it not affect us if we didn’t. You need to come up with a resolution to get rid of the liquid glass and whatever else that’s hogging the battery life ever since this update or you will see many iPhone users like myself becoming android users.

User to user only forum. We don't care what phone you choose. But before you leap to Android, you'll find out Android is coming out with something VERY similar to Liquid Glass, called Material Design 3.


Since you responded to the opening post of this thread, you clearly didn't take the time to even read further. Had you, you'd see on many many of the pages, this link, which you should read ALL the way through and make adjustments, which will likely make things work for your needs --> Liquid Glass - Love It Or Hate It - It's … - Apple Community


Or buy an Android, then you will soon be on their forum complaining. You're not going to be able to escape the newer more modern skeuomorphic design language which all manufacturers will migrate to. Maybe a simple flip phone would be the best option.

Dec 14, 2025 1:47 PM in response to Yohonlp

Yohonlp wrote: "...it should’ve should’ve been a preview of it..."

Yohonlp – Apple published these previews on June 9 — well before the release of iOS 26 on September 15:


Introducing Liquid Glass | Apple


OS - iOS 26 - Apple


You can keep up with Apple news here:


Newsroom - Apple


...where this article appeared in June:


Apple introduces a delightful and elegant new software design


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How to disable liquid glass in iOS 26?

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