You can enlarge the font on an iPhone through two main settings paths: the standard slider in Display & Brightness or the extra-large range hidden in Accessibility’s Larger Text menu.
A screen full of squint-inducing text is one of the easiest iPhone frustrations to fix, yet most people only find the first slider and stop. That’s why the letters still look small. The iPhone actually carries two separate font-size controls — one for everyday adjustment and a second, more powerful one that unlocks sizes big enough for almost anyone. The path you choose depends on how much bigger you need things to be.
The Primary Route: Settings, Then A Slider
The quickest way to larger text lives right inside the main display settings. It covers most needs without digging into the deeper accessibility menus.
- Open Settings and tap Display & Brightness.
- Tap Text Size.
- Drag the slider to the right — each notch increases the font size across the system.
That’s it. The change takes effect immediately, so you can see the preview text update as you drag. This slider offers roughly nine size steps, from a tiny default to a comfortably readable middle ground. If that range maxes out and the text still feels small, you need the second path.
The Larger Text Route: Where The Real Range Lives
The standard Text Size slider stops too early for many people. Apple hides the extended range inside the Accessibility settings, and you have to flip one extra toggle to unlock it.
- Go to Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size.
- Tap Larger Text.
- Toggle Larger Accessibility Sizes on — this enables the full font range.
- Drag the slider right to your preferred size. The extra steps appear only after the toggle is active.
With Larger Accessibility Sizes on, the slider includes roughly 20 total steps instead of nine. The largest size is genuinely large — big enough that a single text message can fill the whole screen. The open the Notes app and type a sentence. If the letters at maximum are still too small, the issue may be the app itself rather than the setting.
When Bigger Text Doesn’t Reach Everywhere
Not every app obeys the iPhone’s font setting, and that catches people off guard. Apple’s Dynamic Type system is what lets apps automatically resize text based on your slider position, but only apps built to use it respond. The core Apple apps — Mail, Contacts, Calendar, Phone, Notes — support Dynamic Type. Many third-party apps do too, but not all.
- Dynamic Type apps: text resizes instantly when you move the slider.
- Non-Dynamic Type apps: the slider has no effect. Some let you set their own font size inside their settings.
If you adjust the font and a specific app doesn’t budge, check whether that app has its own text size option in its settings menu. Failing that, Display Zoom (covered below) enlarges everything, including stubborn apps.
Table: iPhone Font Size Settings At A Glance
| Setting | Where To Find It | What It Actually Does |
|---|---|---|
| Text Size slider | Settings > Display & Brightness | Adjusts font size across Dynamic Type apps, nine steps |
| Larger Text slider | Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size | Unlocks up to 20 font sizes when Accessibility Sizes is on |
| Larger Accessibility Sizes | Toggle inside Larger Text menu | Enables the extended slider range; must be on for extra-large fonts |
| Bold Text | Settings > Display & Brightness | Makes letters heavier, not bigger — pairs well with larger sizes |
| Display Zoom | Settings > Display & Brightness > Display Zoom | Magnifies the entire screen interface, not just text |
| Per-App Text Size | Control Center long-press or Settings > Accessibility > Per App Settings | Sets a different font size for individual apps |
| Dynamic Type support | Built into each app | Determines whether the app listens to your system font size |
What About Display Zoom And Bold Text?
Two other settings get mixed into the “make text bigger” conversation, but neither works exactly like the font sliders.
Display Zoom acts like a magnifying glass for the whole screen. Turn it on via Settings > Display & Brightness > Display Zoom > Larger Text > Use Zoomed, and everything — icons, buttons, menus — gets larger. The trade-off is that you see less on the screen at once, and the layout changes slightly. It’s useful when an app doesn’t support Dynamic Type and refuses to resize its fonts.
Bold Text only adds weight to the letterforms. It makes text thicker and easier to distinguish at any size, but it does not increase the point size. Many people combine Bold Text with a larger font slider for the best readability.
Two Common Mistakes That Keep The Text Tiny
- Stopping at Display & Brightness — the slider there maxes out at a modest size. The real range is behind the Accessibility toggle.
- Confusing Bold Text with larger text — bold changes thickness, not height. If the letters are still small, bump up the slider.
The first mistake is by far the most common. Apple puts the standard slider in plain sight and buries the bigger one two menus deep in Accessibility. If you or someone you know gave up because “the biggest setting wasn’t big enough,” the Larger Accessibility Sizes toggle was the missing piece.
Setting A Different Font Size For One App
Sometimes you want bigger text in Messages but not in Safari, or vice versa. A little-known iOS feature lets you set the font size on a per-app basis, so one slider position no longer rules everything.
- Open Settings > Accessibility > Per App Settings.
- Tap Add App and choose the app you want to customize.
- Tap Larger Text and drag the slider to your preferred size for just that app.
This setting overrides the system-wide font size only for the app you select. The rest of your iPhone stays at whatever size you set in the main slider. Apple’s official documentation covers the system-wide paths most thoroughly, but Apple’s own support pages do not describe this per-app option — it’s a known feature confirmed widely across the iOS community. The guide below from Apple covers every officially documented path. Apple’s font-size support page walks through the standard and accessibility sliders with screenshots.
Table: Which Setting Fits Your Situation?
| Your Situation | The Best Setting | One-Line Setup |
|---|---|---|
| Text is a bit small in most apps | Text Size in Display & Brightness | Settings > Display & Brightness > Text Size, drag right |
| Text is very small and the standard slider barely helps | Larger Text with Accessibility Sizes on | Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size > Larger Text, toggle on |
| One app’s text is fine, another’s is too tiny | Per App Settings | Settings > Accessibility > Per App Settings, add app |
| Icons and everything on screen feel too small | Display Zoom | Settings > Display & Brightness > Display Zoom, choose Larger Text |
| Letters are readable but look thin and hard to distinguish | Bold Text | Settings > Display & Brightness, toggle Bold Text on |
Finish With The Font Size That Fits You
Start at Settings > Display & Brightness > Text Size and drag right. If the letters are still too small, open Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size > Larger Text and turn on Larger Accessibility Sizes before dragging again. That combination — the standard slider plus the extended accessibility range — covers every possible font size the iPhone can offer. Add Bold Text for weight and Display Zoom for screen-wide magnification only if the sliders alone don’t solve the problem.
References & Sources
- Apple Support. “Change the font size on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.” Official steps for standard and accessibility font size paths.
