Phones are supposed to make life easier. Sometimes they do the exact opposite. Tiny text, dim screens, confusing buttons, and alerts that are too quiet can make a phone feel more tiring than helpful.

The good news is that most phones already include settings that fix these problems. You do not need to be especially “techy,” and in many cases you do not need a newer phone.

If reading feels harder than it used to, if tapping the right thing is getting annoying, or if you simply want the phone to feel less fussy, start here.

Start with these five changes on any phone

Before we get into iPhone and Android separately, these are the changes that help most people right away:

The quickest improvements

  1. Make the text bigger. This helps with messages, email, menus, and websites.
  2. Turn up the display size. This makes buttons and icons larger, not just the words.
  3. Increase screen brightness. A dim phone is miserable to read, especially indoors.
  4. Raise the ringtone and call volume. Missing calls because the phone is whispering is absurd, but common.
  5. Clean up the home screen. Too many icons make everything harder to find.

If you only do those five things, the phone will already feel much more manageable.

A better rule
Bigger, brighter, and simpler is usually better. Most people do not need more features. They need less friction.

On an iPhone

Apple hides some of the most useful settings in plain sight. Here are the ones worth changing first.

Make the text larger

Go to Settings → Display & Brightness → Text Size. Slide the bar to the right until the sample text feels comfortable.

If that still is not enough, go to Settings → Accessibility → Display & Text Size → Larger Text. Turn on Larger Accessibility Sizes for even bigger text options.

Good to know
This does not just help in one app. It affects Mail, Messages, Notes, Settings, and many other apps throughout the phone.

Make buttons and icons easier to tap

Go to Settings → Display & Brightness → Display Zoom and choose Larger Text or the zoomed display option if your iPhone offers it.

This makes more than the words larger. App icons, menus, and some buttons become easier to see and easier to press accurately.

Increase contrast and reduce visual clutter

Go to Settings → Accessibility → Display & Text Size. The most useful switches here are:

  • Bold Text — makes text darker and easier to read
  • Increase Contrast — helps buttons and labels stand out
  • Reduce Transparency — cuts down on the blurry, layered effects that can make screens look muddy
  • Button Shapes — makes tappable items more obvious

You do not have to turn everything on. Try one or two changes, then see whether the phone feels calmer and clearer.

Make the phone louder and easier to hear

Go to Settings → Sounds & Haptics. Raise the Ringtone and Alerts slider. If needed, choose a ringtone that is sharper and easier to hear instead of something soft and subtle. The goal is simple: you should be able to hear it from the next room.

Also turn on Change with Buttons only if you want the side volume buttons to control alert volume. Some people like that. Others accidentally lower everything without realizing it, so it is worth checking how your phone behaves.

Use accessibility shortcuts

Go to Settings → Accessibility → Accessibility Shortcut. Here you can choose tools to open quickly by triple-clicking the side button.

The most useful options for many people are:

  • Magnifier — turns the phone camera into a handheld magnifying glass
  • Zoom — enlarges part of the screen
  • Assistive Access — simplifies the interface dramatically for people who want only the basics

A very useful extra: Magnifier

The built-in Magnifier app is one of the best-hidden helpful features on the iPhone. It lets you point the camera at a menu, medicine bottle, thermostat, or printed instructions and enlarge the image instantly. For many people, this alone is worth knowing about.

On an Android phone

Android phones vary a little by brand, so Samsung, Google Pixel, and Motorola may not all use the exact same menu names. But the key settings are still there.

Make the text bigger

Go to Settings → Display → Font Size or Settings → Accessibility → Text and Display, depending on the phone.

Move the text size slider up until messages, menus, and labels are comfortable to read.

Make everything on screen larger

Look for Display Size in either the Display or Accessibility settings. This enlarges icons, buttons, and other items across the phone.

If the problem is not just reading but tapping the right thing, this setting usually helps more than text size alone.

Turn on magnification if needed

Go to Settings → Accessibility → Magnification. This lets you zoom in on part of the screen when something is too small to read.

It is not something most people use all day, but it is excellent for the occasional app that insists on tiny text.

Raise the volume for calls and alerts

Go to Settings → Sound & Vibration. Increase the ringtone, notification, and media volume. Some Android phones also let you test sounds before choosing one, which is genuinely helpful.

Pick a ringtone that is easy to hear and not too gentle. If you miss calls regularly, changing the ringtone is one of the simplest fixes.

Simplify the home screen

Remove apps you do not use from the main screen. Keep the essentials on the first page: Phone, Messages, Camera, Photos, and maybe Maps.

On some Android phones, especially Samsung phones, you may also find an Easy Mode setting. This makes icons larger, increases contrast, and simplifies the layout. It is often one of the most useful settings to try.

One more thing that helps on both phones

Move the most important apps to the bottom row of the home screen. On most phones, that bottom row stays visible no matter which screen you are on. Put the essentials there:

  • Phone
  • Messages
  • Camera
  • Photos

This sounds almost too simple to matter. It matters. Knowing exactly where the important things live reduces hesitation and mistakes.

If you are helping someone else

If you are setting up a phone for a parent, spouse, or older relative, do not change twenty things in one sitting. That is how you end up creating a device that technically works but now feels unfamiliar and vaguely hostile.

Instead:

Set it up without making it weird

  1. Start with text size, display size, and volume.
  2. Clean up the home screen and leave only the most-used apps visible.
  3. Show the person what changed right away.
  4. Ask them to try it for a day before making more adjustments.
  5. Write down the path to any important settings so you can find them again later.
Try not to over-help
The goal is not to make the phone perfect. The goal is to make it comfortable enough that the person keeps using it with confidence.

When it may be time for a different phone

If you have already made the text bigger, increased display size, raised the volume, and simplified the screen — and the phone still feels frustrating — then yes, it may be time to consider a phone designed for easier use.

But do the settings first. A surprising number of “I need a new phone” problems are really “this phone was set up badly” problems.

Common Questions

Will making the text bigger break apps?

Usually no. Most modern apps adjust just fine. A few older or badly designed apps may look cramped, but the phone will still be usable. The tradeoff is almost always worth it.

What if I cannot find the exact menu listed here?

Use the search box in the Settings app and type terms like text size, display size, magnification, or sound. That is often faster than digging through menus manually.

Should I buy a phone marketed for seniors?

Sometimes, yes. But not as your first move. Many standard iPhones and Android phones become much easier to use after ten minutes of thoughtful setup.