How to Stop iPhone Screen From Rotating (iOS 7 and Up)

What if you don’t want your iPhone screen to rotate when you change the device’s position? Then you need to use the screen rotation lock feature built into the iOS (this tip also applies to the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch). Here’s what to do:

How to Turn Off iPhone Screen Rotation Lock

If your iPhone won’t rotate when you want it to, you need to turn screen rotation lock off. Just follow these steps:

In iOS 11 and up, it’s on the left, just under the first group of buttons.In iOS 7-10, it’s on the top right.

Whatever version you have, look for the icon that shows a lock with a curved arrow around it.

How to Disable iPhone Screen Rotation (iOS 4-6)

You can lock iPhone screen rotation on earlier versions of the iOS, but on iOS 4-6, the steps are slightly different:

How to Know If Screen Rotation Lock Is Enabled

In iOS 7 and up, you can see that screen rotation lock is turned on by opening Control Center, but there’s a quicker way: the icon bar at the top of the iPhone screen. To check if rotation lock is enabled, look at the top your screen, next to the battery icon. If rotation lock is on, you’ll see the rotation lock icon—the lock with the curved arrow—to the left of the battery icon. If you don’t see that icon, rotation lock is off.

Another Option For Enabling Rotation Lock?

The steps listed above are currently the only way to lock or unlock the screen orientation—but there was once another option. In early beta versions of iOS 9, Apple added a feature that allowed the user to choose whether the ringer switch on the side of the iPhone would mute the ringer or lock the screen orientation. This feature has been available on the iPad for years, but this was the first time it appeared on the iPhone. When iOS 9 was officially released, the feature had been removed. The addition and removal of features during beta development and testing aren’t unusual for Apple, but this was disappointing to some people. While the feature didn’t come back in iOS 10-15, perhaps it will return in a later version.

Why the iPhone Screen Rotates

The iPhone screen rotating when you don’t want it to can be annoying, but it’s actually caused by a useful feature. The iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad are smart enough to know how you’re holding them and rotate the screen to match. They do this using the accelerometer and gyroscope sensors built into the devices. These are the same sensors that let you control games by moving the device and that help give you accurate directions in the Maps app. If you hold the devices sideways (in what’s called landscape mode), the screen flips to match that orientation. The same is true when you hold the phone upright (also called portrait mode).