

About Accessibility Nutrition Labels
At Apple we believe that the best technology is designed with everyone in mind. Everyone deserves to create, connect, play, and do what they love—in the way that works best for them. Accessibility Nutrition Labels help you learn which accessibility features an app supports before you download. Use the Accessibility section on the product page to understand if you can use a feature like VoiceOver, Voice Control, Larger Text, and Captions to complete common tasks in the app.
What information can you learn?
Developers who choose to share accessibility information on the App Store may indicate support for the following accessibility features:
VoiceOver
Navigate and explore the app using gestures, braille, and speech output.
Voice Control
Navigate and interact with the app using your voice to tap, swipe, type, and more.
Larger Text
Increase the text size in the app to 200 percent or more.
Dark Interface
Apply a dark color scheme to the screens, menus, and controls to reduce eye strain.
Differentiate Without Color Alone
Use shapes or text, in addition to or instead of color, to distinguish key information.
Sufficient Contrast
Increase or adjust the contrast between text or iconography and background.
Reduced Motion
Modify or reduce certain types of animation that may cause motion sickness or discomfort.
Captions
Display the dialogue and relevant sounds of video or audio-only content with text, usually time-synchronized.
Audio Descriptions
Hear audio descriptions of video content in a clip, show, or movie with narration.
This section can also indicate if the developer has not yet provided information or has stated that they support none of these features.
The developer may also provide a link to their accessibility website so they can share more about the app’s accessibility, such as additional features not listed above.
Note that some supported accessibility features are turned off by default and need be turned on either in settings within the app or on your device (Settings > Accessibility on iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro or System Settings > Accessibility on Mac).
How developers evaluate app accessibility
In order to indicate their app supports an accessibility feature, developers should meet a set of criteria defined by Apple for that feature and keep their Accessibility Nutrition Labels up to date. They are also responsible for verifying that all common tasks (for example, creating an appointment in a calendar app) can be completed using that accessibility feature alone.
If you come across an accessibility issue in an app, you can share that with the developer:
• Visit the app’s product page on the App Store and go to their App Support page, or
• Rate and review the app on the App Store product page.
If you believe an app’s product page has intentionally misleading or harmful accessibility information, please alert us through Report a Problem so Apple can investigate and take action.
* Accessibility Nutrition Labels are based on support for common tasks and may not reflect how features are supported in less common tasks.