How to Put a Home Button on Your iPhone Screen With AssistiveTouch
To add a home button to your iPhone screen by enabling AssistiveTouch, follow these steps:
How to Use AssistiveTouch on iPhone
With AssistiveTouch touch turned on, here’s how to use it. If you’re using iOS 12, go to Settings > General > Accessibility. If you’re using iOS 12, just tap AssistiveTouch from the Accessibility screen. Tapping the icon brings up a menu with the following options:
Notifications: Provides quick access to Notification Center. Custom: Lets you access any custom shortcuts or actions you’ve created. Device: Offers one-touch access to common features like locking the phone, raising and lowering volume, mute, and more. Siri: Launches Siri (big surprise, right?). Control Center: Reveals Control Center (another surprise). Home: The equivalent of clicking the Home button. Just like the physical Home button, you can also double-tap it.
When you select any of these options, you can go back by tapping the back arrow at the center of the window. You drag and drop the AssistiveTouch icon to move around the screen to a position that’s most comfortable or useful to you.
How to Customize AssistiveTouch on iPhone
Want to change the actions that are triggered when you tap or double tap the AssistiveTouch onscreen Home button? You can. Just follow these steps:
How to Turn Off AssistiveTouch on iPhone
Don’t want your onscreen Home button any longer? Turn off AssistiveTouch by following these steps: In iOS 12, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch.
What is AssistiveTouch?
AssistiveTouch puts a virtual Home button on your iPhone’s screen. This virtual Home button allows you to perform the same actions as pressing the Home button, but by tapping an onscreen icon instead. It also contains shortcuts to common tasks that involve the Home button and allows you to customize the shortcuts triggered by tapping it. If you’re using iOS 12, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch. AssistiveTouch was originally designed for people with physical conditions that make it hard for them to press the button. Since then, it’s also been used as a workaround for broken Home buttons (for instance, it can help fix an iPhone that won’t turn off), by people who are worried the Home button will wear out if they click it too much (that’s not true, by the way), and by those who like the convenience of the feature.