iOS 26's Liquid Glass Design Draws Criticism From Users

It's been two days since iOS 26 was released, and Apple's new Liquid Glass design is even more divisive than expected.

iOS 26 on Three iPhones
Any major design change can create controversy as people get used to the new look, but the MacRumors forums, Reddit, Apple Support Communities, and social media sites seem to feature more criticism than praise as people discuss the update.

Complaints

There are a long list of complaints about Liquid Glass, from the impact on readability to lag caused by animations. Here are some of the main critiques:

Some People Like It

On the MacRumors forums, complaints about Liquid Glass are interspersed with responses from people who have been using it during beta, and the consensus is "you'll get used to it."

It does always take time to get used to a new look, and Liquid Glass will become less jarring as people become accustomed to the new animations and the behavior of buttons and other interface elements.

Not everyone hates Liquid Glass, and there are also many positive comments from people who prefer the new design. Some of that sentiment:

Media Complaints

iOS 7

Everyone remembers iOS 7, because it was the first big design change that Apple made to iOS. Apple did away with skeuomorphism in favor of a "flat" design, and it was not a change that people were prepared for. A lot of the comments shared when iOS 7 came out mirror the comments we're seeing now about Liquid Glass.

Despite the complaints about iOS 7, Apple stuck with it. There were ongoing refinements to fix bugs and to tweak the overall design, but Apple didn't reverse course. Design updates in iOS 8, iOS 9, and iOS 10 didn't change the fundamentals, but it got better and better, and people got used to it.

Liquid Glass could follow the same path. Apple will make updates and optimizations, but it's probably going to inform the next decade of software releases. In discussion threads on Liquid Glass, you'll see a lot of comments from people recalling iOS 7 and reminding us all that we've been here before.

Tone Down Liquid Glass

If you're having a hard time adjusting to the Liquid Glass design, there is no opt out, but you can toggle on Reduce Transparency.

You can also increase your display contrast, and the two settings together will eliminate most of the translucency that was introduced with Liquid Glass.

Chime In

What do you love or hate about Liquid Glass? Let us know in the comments.

Related Roundups: iOS 26, iPadOS 26
Related Forum: iOS 26

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Top Rated Comments

Seoras Avatar
21 weeks ago
I absolutely love it! I love how my iPhone and iPad screens now look.
I also love how the buttons in my apps pop and are much more defined and obvious.
Lovely work! Nice and refreshing to look at.

EDIT: I should add this. I'm an App developer. This is the first time I can ever remember downloading the new Xcode and not having to spend all day fixing my apps so they still compile and work. They compiled first time.
Not only does '26 look good but it seems to run smoothly with no glitches or bugs. Normally I'd advise my family members not to install until the .1 or .2 updates came out but yesterday I was encouraging them all to upgrade immediately. Apple's really cleaned up their software in comparison to previous year's updates.
Score: 74 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Adysubman Avatar
21 weeks ago
Apple windows Vista
Score: 68 Votes (Like | Disagree)
21 weeks ago
Staying on 18 for a while. I’ve learned many times to NEVER update for a week or so, because problems and issues.
Score: 61 Votes (Like | Disagree)
21 weeks ago
My issue is not with the design, it's with the sloppiness. Both iOS 26 and macOS 26 are full of visible bugs - ones which have been around, and well reported since the initial betas. There are gross inconsistencies everywhere, and basic legibility has gone out the window.

I am generally forgiving of a bug here and there, but what I am seeing is a complete disregard of any form of QC from Apple. For a trillion $ company their sheer inability to have a small team of developers focus on each official app to clean up very visible UI issues is appalling.

That is the main issue here.

Note: A simple example of well-reported bugs, which have been around since B1 and are unfixed:
- Spotlight: Swipe down... the search bar is a mess of overlapping text for a second until it fixes itself
- Home Screen: Each app icon undergoes some kind of redraw when it's minimized, making something 'pop' on the icon 1/2 second after it's finished minimizing.
- Spotlight: When you hold down on text in the search field to move the cursor, it glows so bright you cannot read the loupe at all
- Spotlight: Files content appears, despite being turned off.
- Keyboard: There are two versions of the keyboard, each which react differently to certain words. For example "Hey man how's it going man" will almost always drop the final "n" on the "old" keyboard.
Score: 60 Votes (Like | Disagree)
21 weeks ago
It's a surprisingly sloppy release that needs a ton of polishing. And reducing translucency and increasing contrast only helps a little bit - it should help more.
Score: 41 Votes (Like | Disagree)
velemar1 Avatar
21 weeks ago
I immediately downgraded back to iOS 18. I was embarrassed for how silly, cartoonish, and fruity my phone suddenly looked. And it ran super slow. Surprised they don’t even let you switch it off. Avoid the upgrade especially if on an older iPhone.
Score: 34 Votes (Like | Disagree)