Skip to main content

How Guided Access can protect your iPhone or iPad

Author holding iPhone Guided Access Feat Image.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Guided Access is one of those obscure accessibility controls buried deep within iOS and iPadOS that you likely didn’t even know existed. However, it can make a big difference in how you — or selected others — use and control access to your Apple device. We explain how to enable and use this feature on the iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch

Guided Access acts to limit your Apple device to using just one active app. It grants access to all controls and features available to that specific app, but it doesn’t let users access any other app installed on the device. Guided Access isn’t limited to specific apps. For example, if you restrict an iPhone to just YouTube Kids and hand that device over to a child, your device won’t be in total disarray when you take it back. Guided Access doesn’t even grant access to the home screen.

Overall, Guided Access serves to protect your privacy, prevent accidental changes by a third party who may be using your device, or keep you focused on the task at hand. The timer function is especially convenient for limiting usage to specific tasks. It’s ideal for parents, educational settings, businesses, restaurants, museums, and so on.

How to enable Guided Access

We start by enabling the feature using iOS 15. These instructions work equally well with all Apple mobile devices.

Step 1: Open the Settings app.

Step 2: Scroll down and choose Accessibility.

Guided Access scroll down and tap Accessibility.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 3: Scroll down and choose Guided Access near the bottom.

Scroll down and tap Guided Access near the bottom.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 4: Select the toggle next to Guided Access to enable this feature (if it’s not already).

Tap the Toggle next to Guided Access to enable it.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 5: Choose Passcode settings and then select Set Guided Access passcode. Enter a passcode twice. The passcode is the key to protecting your phone because the user must know what it is to exit the designated app. Alternately, you can enable Face ID or Touch ID as a way to end a Guided Access session.

Tap Passcode Settings and then Tap Set Guided Access Passcode.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 6: Go back to the previous screen and select the toggle next to Accessibility shortcut. This allows you to triple-click the Home or Side button and enter Guided Access mode at any time from within your chosen app.

Go back to the previous screen and tap the Toggle next to Accessibility Shortcut.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

How to use Guided Access

Do the following steps when you’re ready to concentrate on a single app.

Alternately, you can use Siri to start a Guided Access session by launching an app and telling Siri to “turn on Guided Access.” Siri will not do anything until you have an app open.

Step 1: Open the app that you want to focus on.

Step 2: Triple-click the Side button (iPhone X or newer) or the Home button (iPhone SE or any older Apple device with a Home button).

Step 3: Tap Guided Access.

Tap the Guided Access button.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 4: Use your finger to circle parts of the screen you don’t want responding to touch input. This is convenient when watching a video or reading so you cannot tap out of your task. You can move or resize the defined areas or tap the X to remove them.

First circle parts of the screen.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 5: Select the Start button in the upper-right.

Tap the Start button.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

How to choose additional Guided Access options

After you open an app and activate Guided Access, you can easily move in and out of the mode with a triple-click of either the Home or the Side button. To see additional options, you must first click out of Guided Access. Then you will see an Options button in the bottom-left corner. This lets you control access to several features.

Step 1: Choose Options.

Tap the options button.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 2: A pop-up menu appears at the bottom displaying six toggles: Side Button, Volume Buttons, Motion, Keyboards, Touch, and Time Limit. Choose the toggle to enable or disable each and then select Done.

Tap Options and Done.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 3: Resume to continue your Guided Access session.

Choose Options and Resume.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

How to exit Guided Access

There are two major ways to terminate a Guided Access session.

Once Guided Access is enabled, anyone trying to leave the locked app will receive a message telling them to triple-click the Home or Side button to exit. If they don’t know the passcode, they won’t be able to exit Guided Access.

If you ever get stuck in Guided Access mode, just hard-reboot the device to clear it out. To completely disable Guided Access, go back into Settings and tap the Toggle to disable this feature.

Step 1: Triple-click the Side or Home button, enter the passcode, and tap End.

End Guided Access session.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 2: Triple-click the Side or Home button and allow Touch ID or Face ID to end the session.

Jackie Dove
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jackie is an obsessive, insomniac tech writer and editor in northern California. A wildlife advocate, cat fan, and photo app…
The iPhone 17 Pro may not have a redesigned camera after all
A close-up of the cameras on the iPhone 16 Pro.

If you've followed any of the previous iPhone 17 leaks, then you likely read that the camera is supposedly getting a redesign that makes it look more like a Pixel than an iPhone. The phone is still almost a year away, so many rumors are just hearsay with no confirmation at this point. Now, a new leak suggests that while the iPhone 17 Pro will see a change, the camera module will remain triangular.

According to tipster Setsuna Digital on Weibo, the camera won't undergo as drastic a redesign as previously believed. "My sources told me that the back has indeed changed, but the triple-camera layout is still a triangle, not the horizontal strip that is currently circulating online." The majority of leaks so far have been from different companies within the supply chain that manufacture different parts for the iPhone 17 Pro.

Read more
Visual Intelligence has made the Camera Control on my iPhone 16 worth using
Using Visual Intelligence on an iPhone 16 Pro showing ChatGPT answer.

One of the big selling points of the iPhone 16 hardware is the Camera Control button. It’s a small physical button on the bottom right of the frame that also has some capacitive capabilities. With the initial launch of iOS 18, a single press launches your camera app of choice, and you can do half presses and sliding gestures to adjust camera settings. It’s a neat idea, but it has some flaws that prevent it from being a great shutter button.

But now we have iOS 18.2, and that brought a lot of new Apple Intelligence features to our phones, especially if you have an iPhone 16. With iOS 18.2, Apple finally added Visual Intelligence, a feature similar to Google Lens, but on iPhone.

Read more
A new render teases the iPhone 17 Pro Max’s big redesign, and I’m torn
Leaked render of iPhone 17 Pro Max front glass and rear camera bar module.

With the iPhone 16 line, Apple made some big changes with the base models, while the iPhone 16 Pro versions looked identical to those from the past several years. But Apple appears to be making some very significant changes to the design of the iPhone 17 Pro Max — especially if these mock-up renders from a Russian YouTube channel, Wylsacom, are accurate.

The YouTube video shows that the iPhone 17 Pro Max will look nothing like its predecessors, according to the rumors that this mock-up is based on.

Read more