How to Turn Sensors Off on Android

The quickest way to turn off all sensors at once is with Sensors Off, which is a toggle you can enable through developer options.

What Does ‘Sensors Off’ Do?

Just as it sounds, toggling Sensors Off to the on position will activate this function, which turns off all sensors. This means the microphone, camera, accelerometer, gyroscope, proximity sensor, magnetometer, and more can’t be accessed by the phone or your apps. Here are some examples of what that means:

The Camera app will crash if you open it to take a picture or video, and other apps that need the camera might display an error. Audio recording apps will “record” silence. The Fit app will no longer be able to detect your heart rate. The brightness level won’t adjust automatically. Apps like Google Maps won’t know which way you’re facing (you still need to turn off location services if you want to stop location tracking). The lock screen won’t automatically display when you turn the phone over to look at it.

You can still use your phone, though. Wi-Fi and mobile data will not be shut off, your keyboard will work essentially the same (aside from mic access), the speakers will still transmit audio, and all other apps unaffected by disabled sensors will work normally. Of course, you’re free to toggle sensors on and off at any time, as many times as you want. Immediately after tapping the toggle, the sensors stop (or start) reporting data to the system and apps. For example, if you’re recording audio, and you toggle sensors on and off over and over again, the recording will show muted spaces each time the sensors were off.