Hearing

Person with hiking backpack wearing hearing aid and looking down at an iPhone in their hand

Explore tools designed to enhance the sounds you hear or help you stay connected without hearing a sound.

UpdatedMade for iPhone hearing devices

Hearing aids and more, made specifically for your Apple devices.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad, Mac

Apple has worked with top manufacturers to create hearing aids, cochlear implants, and sound processors designed specifically for Apple devices.1 These advanced hearing devices provide outstanding sound quality, offer many helpful features, and are as easy to set up and use as any other Bluetooth device. Instantly apply your audiologist’s environmental presets as you go outdoors or enter noisy locations, like restaurants, without having to rely on additional remotes.

Set up Made for iPhone hearing devices on:

NewMusic Haptics

Experience music on iPhone with vibrations synchronized to the rhythm of a song.

Available on:

iPhone

Music Haptics syncs the iPhone Taptic Engine — which creates your device’s vibrations — with the rhythm of songs so you can enjoy music with taps, textures, and refined haptics.2 Music Haptics works with millions of songs across the Apple Music catalog.

Set up Music Haptics on:

iPhone

Audio settings

Customize the audio preferences on your devices to fit your needs.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV, AirPods Max, AirPods Pro, AirPods, EarPods, Powerbeats, Powerbeats Pro, Beats Solo Pro

Audio innovations for AirPods Pro help you stay connected in noisy environments, enhance your overall audio experience, and make it easier for you to use them across devices. With Conversation Boost, computational audio and beamforming microphones focus AirPods Pro on the voice of the person directly in front of you — helping you distinguish their speech from background noise.

Set up Conversation Boost on:

Whether you’re listening to music, watching a movie, or talking to a loved one, Headphone Accommodations lets you customize your audio to best suit your hearing needs. Amplify soft sounds and adjust certain frequencies based on your preferences. You can also go through a series of listening tests that help you set up as many as nine unique profiles.

Stereo recordings usually have distinct left- and right-channel audio tracks. Mono Audio can help streamline the differences by playing both audio channels in both ears. You can adjust the balance for greater volume in either ear, so you won’t miss a single note of a concerto or a beat of your favorite song.

UpdatedSound Recognition

Listens for specific sounds and notifies you when they are detected.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad

Sound Recognition listens for certain sounds and uses on‑device intelligence to notify you when they are detected. This feature recognizes 15 different sounds — or you can train your device to listen for electronic sounds that are unique to your environment, like the beeping of appliances in your kitchen, specific types of alarms, or doorbells.

Set up Sound Recognition on:

FaceTime

Recognizes and highlights you when you’re using sign language in group calls.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV

With high-quality video and a fast frame rate, FaceTime is a great way to communicate using sign language on iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV. It can detect when you are using sign language in Group FaceTime calls and automatically make you prominent.

Set up FaceTime on:

Live Listen

Use your device’s microphone to amplify sound in noisy settings.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad, AirPods Max, AirPods Pro, AirPods, Powerbeats Pro, Beats Fit Pro, Made for iPhone hearing devices

Live Listen is an assistive listening feature that helps you have conversations in loud places. Just turn on the feature and move your device toward the people you’re talking with. Audio is picked up by the device’s microphone and sent to your wireless headphones or Made for iPhone hearing devices, so you can hear what they’re saying more clearly.3

Sensory Alerts

Get your notifications through sound, vibrations, a flashing light, or all three.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch

Your device lets you know when something’s up, in a way you’ll notice. Choose visual or vibrating alerts for incoming Phone and FaceTime calls, new text messages, new and sent mail, and calendar events. You can set an LED light flash for incoming calls or have your iPhone display a photo of the caller. If you’re on your Mac, have it flash its screen when an app needs your attention. Or if you’re on the go, turn on the Taptic Engine on your Apple Watch to give you a gentle tap every time a notification comes in.

Set up Sensory Alerts on:

UpdatedClosed Captions

Synced text transcriptions of a video’s speech and nonverbal communication.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV

Closed captions are a text transcription displayed onscreen in sync with a video’s dialogue and action. In addition to transcribing speech in a scene, they also capture nonverbal communication, music, and sound effects. Supported in apps like the Apple TV app, closed captions are available in more than 40 languages for movies, TV shows, videos, and podcasts — just look for the CC icon. Customize captions with different styles and fonts, including styles that are larger and outlined for better legibility.

Set up Closed Captions on:

Transcriptions

Gives written transcripts of podcasts and recorded audio.

Available on:

iPhone, iPad, Mac

Transcripts offer full-text versions of whatever you’re listening to, making everything more accessible and immersive than ever. Get a full transcript of your favorite podcast on Apple Podcasts right on your iPhone or iPad.

Set up Podcast transcriptions on:

Record audio in the Notes app, and generate live audio transcriptions that you can search through or combine with other comments, checklists, or documents.

Set up Notes app transcriptions on:

Noise app

Tracks sound levels around you and alerts you if they’re unsafe for your hearing.

Available on:

Apple Watch

The Noise app tracks decibel levels of the ambient sounds around you, helping you identify when sound levels in your environment, or from your headphones, could negatively affect your hearing. When you configure the Noise app on Apple Watch and connect compatible headphones, Control Center shows you if the sounds playing through the headphones reach unsafe levels.4 And all your information is stored securely in the Health app on iPhone for easy access to your data whenever you need it.

Set up the Noise app on:

Apple Watch

Go deeper with additional resources.

Go deeper with videos from Apple.

Learn tips, tricks, and how-tos for hearing features from Apple Support on YouTube.

Watch now

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