Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Mobile
  5. How tos

How to hide apps on your iPhone in iOS 18 and earlier

Add as a preferred source on Google
Someone holding an iPhone 15 Pro Max with the screen on and showing the home screen.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

Some people love the iPhone’s home screen, while others dislike it. Unlike Android, which uses an app drawer to store applications, the iPhone displays app icons directly on the home screen. This setup makes apps easily accessible, but it can create a cluttered appearance, particularly for users who have many apps. The introduction of the App Library has helped by providing a central location to organize apps. However, for many, the home screen remains the primary space for storing applications.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

10 minutes

What You Need

  • An iPhone or iPad

Of course, this becomes a problem if you want to hide an app. Whether it's an app you don't need very often, a sensitive banking app, or anything else you want to keep hidden, having it proclaiming its presence on your home screen is a problem. Thankfully, Apple has included a number of quick and easy ways to hide apps away without removing them from your phone.

Since there is are some slight differences between iOS 18 (now available for everyone) and previous versions of iOS, we show you both ways below.

How to hide and lock apps in iOS 18

In iOS 18, Apple has introduced the option to conceal and secure apps, providing an additional layer of protection for your device. This is the way to do it on the all-new iPhone 16e and any phone with iOS 18 on it.

Step 1: First, press and hold the icon you want to hide or lock on your iPhone home screen.

Step 2: On the menu that appears, tap Require Face ID, then confirm your choice.

Screenshot showing how to require Face ID to open an app in iOS 18.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

Step 3: If the app is able to be hidden, you will also see an option to Hide and require Face ID. Tap to confirm, and the app will disappear from your home screen.

Screenshot showing how to hide an app in iOS 18.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

Step 4: To unhide a hidden app, go into your iPhone’s App library. Choose the Hidden folder; it should be the final one.

Step 5: Long-press on the app you no longer want hidden, and choose Don’t require Face ID. The app should appear once again on your home screen.

Screenshot showing how to unhide a hidden app in iOS 18.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

How to hide apps in iOS 17 or older

Hiding an app on your iPhone's home screen is simple, and very fast. These steps are for iPhones using iOS 17 or older. The steps are different in iOS 18, as you'll see below.

Step 1: Find the app you want to hide on your home page.

Step 2: Press and hold on the app in question.

Step 3: A box will pop up. Select Remove app.

Step 4: It'll ask you whether you want to uninstall the app, or just remove it from the home screen. Choose Remove from home screen to hide the app without uninstalling it.

How to find a hidden app

If you're hiding an app, rather than uninstalling it, then it's a fairly good guess you want to access that app again. While it's no longer easily accessible on your home screen, it's not difficult to find that hidden app again. There are two ways of doing this, and both are very simple.

The directions here apply for iOS 18 and older.

Step 1: Spotlight search is a strong iOS feature, and it's great for finding any app, not just hidden ones.

Step 2: To use it, swipe down from your home screen. Don't swipe from the top of the screen, or you'll open your notifications. Instead, swipe from the middle.

Step 3: When Spotlight search appears, type in the name of the app you want.

How to find a hidden app using the App Library

The next method for searching involves the App Library.

Step 1: Swipe to the left until you reach the end of your home screen, and your App library opens.

Step 2: Choose the search bar at the top of the screen, then either scroll down the alphabetical list, or search for your chosen app.

With that all said and done, you're now an iPhone app hiding pro! Whether you use one of these methods or all of them, they're at your disposal for hiding iPhone apps however you see fit.

Bryan M. Wolfe
Former Mobile and A/V Freelancer
Bryan M. Wolfe has over a decade of experience as a technology writer. He writes about mobile.
Android 17 makes it harder for bad actors to guess and crack the PIN on your phone
Thieves only get 20 shots before the door slams shut
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Google is planning on making Android 17 even more secure. The company had previously confirmed that Android 17 will now reduce the number of times someone can guess your PIN or password and add longer wait times between failed attempts.

Now, thanks to a deeper breakdown from Mishaal Rahman, we have a better idea of how aggressive that change really is.

Read more
Acti just turned your smartphone keyboard into an AI assistant
One keyboard that types your words and does your errands. This might be the upgrade your thumbs have been waiting for.
Acti keyboard open on iPhone

Your smartphone’s keyboard is the thing you interact with the most, and yet, it has largely remained the same since it was introduced two decades ago. Yes, it has become better at understanding our typing habits and predicting text, but its function has largely remained unchanged. 

A Singapore startup called Acti looked at the keyboard and the large space it occupies on your smartphone and asked a fair question. Why not make it actually do things? After seeing its keyboard in action, I think the idea has legs.

Read more
Finding photos is so much easier with Siri AI in iOS 27 that I no longer scroll
Natural language photo search in iOS 27 is the kind of feature that quietly becomes essential.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

My camera roll has crossed 8,000 photos, and it got there by capturing random moments (only to forget them later). The problem, however, starts when someone asks me to share something specific. It could be their portrait from last weekend or the food pictures they snapped using my phone.

Finding those pictures usually means scrolling through my seemingly endless camera roll. If the photo is a month or two old, I end up scrolling past hundreds of other images to find it, and that gets old fast.

Read more