577

I'm wondering if it's possible to detect whether a browser is running on iOS, similar to how you can feature detect with Modernizr (although this is obviously device detection rather than feature detection).

Normally I would favour feature detection instead, but I need to find out whether a device is iOS because of the way they handle videos as per this question YouTube API not working with iPad / iPhone / non-Flash device

5

23 Answers 23

1084

Detecting iOS

With iOS 13 iPad both User agent and platform strings are changed and differentiating between iPad and MacOS seems possible, so all answers below needs to take that into account now.

This might be the shortest alternative that also covers iOS 13:

function iOS() {
  return [
    'iPad Simulator',
    'iPhone Simulator',
    'iPod Simulator',
    'iPad',
    'iPhone',
    'iPod'
  ].includes(navigator.platform)
  // iPad on iOS 13 detection
  || (navigator.userAgent.includes("Mac") && "ontouchend" in document)
}

iOS will be either true or false

Worse option: User agent sniffing

User Agent sniffing is more dangerous and problems appear often.

On iPad iOS 13, the user agent is identical with that of a MacOS 13 computer, but if you ignore iPads this might work still for a while:

var iOS = !window.MSStream && /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.userAgent); // fails on iPad iOS 13

The !window.MSStream is to not incorrectly detect IE11, see here and here.

Note: Both navigator.userAgent and navigator.platform can be faked by the user or a browser extension.

Browser extensions to change userAgent or platform exist because websites use too heavy-handed detection and often disable some features even if the user's browser would otherwise be able to use that feature.

To de-escalate this conflict with users it's recommended to detect specifically for each case the exact features that your website needs. Then when the user gets a browser with the needed feature it will already work without additional code changes.

Detecting iOS version

The most common way of detecting the iOS version is by parsing it from the User Agent string. But there is also feature detection inference*;

We know for a fact that history API was introduced in iOS4 - matchMedia API in iOS5 - webAudio API in iOS6 - WebSpeech API in iOS7 and so on.

Note: The following code is not reliable and will break if any of these HTML5 features is deprecated in a newer iOS version. You have been warned!

function iOSversion() {

  if (iOS) { // <-- Use the one here above
    if (window.indexedDB) { return 'iOS 8 and up'; }
    if (window.SpeechSynthesisUtterance) { return 'iOS 7'; }
    if (window.webkitAudioContext) { return 'iOS 6'; }
    if (window.matchMedia) { return 'iOS 5'; }
    if (window.history && 'pushState' in window.history) { return 'iOS 4'; }
    return 'iOS 3 or earlier';
  }

  return 'Not an iOS device';
}
34
  • 12
    What you're doing in the second snippet is feature inference, not feature detection. Feature detection is testing features that you're actually going to use, whereas what you're doing is testing features that you happen to know were introduced in a particular version of the OS and inferring the OS version from them. This is fragile because future versions of iOS could remove these features.
    – Tim Down
    Apr 2, 2012 at 16:41
  • 33
    This is a better way to write your check: var iOS = /(iPad|iPhone|iPod)/g.test(navigator.userAgent); May 6, 2013 at 5:59
  • 5
    Just a note - the navigator.platform array doesn't work on the iPad Simulator because it has the entire phrase "iPad Simulator" in the platform string. Jan 10, 2014 at 5:39
  • 3
    Testing for iPad, iPhone or iPod in the user agent string will give a false positive in case the user has a Window Phone. Internet Explorer on this device contains a message '...like iPhone OS...' in the user agent string and thus will return true on this test. Aug 22, 2014 at 9:02
  • 24
    From iOS 13 the iPad's user agent has changed to "Mac OS", for example: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_15) AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/13.0 Safari/605.1.15 so this answer need to be updated
    – zvi
    Jul 7, 2019 at 14:34
70

After iOS 13 you should detect iOS devices like this, since iPad will not be detected as iOS devices by old ways (due to new "desktop" options, enabled by default):

let isIOS = /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform)
|| (navigator.platform === 'MacIntel' && navigator.maxTouchPoints > 1)

The first condition for iOS < 13 or iPhone or iPad with disabled Desktop mode, the second condition for iPadOS 13 in the default configuration, since it position itself like Macintosh Intel, but actually is the only Macintosh with multi-touch.

Rather a hack than a real solution, but work reliably for me

P.S. As being said earlier, you probably should add IE checkup

let isIOS = (/iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform) ||
(navigator.platform === 'MacIntel' && navigator.maxTouchPoints > 1)) &&
!window.MSStream
8
  • Why not use the navigator.userAgent for this check /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform)? It seems that navigator.platform always returns 'MacIntel' for iPhone iOS <= 12
    – Harry Theo
    Oct 29, 2019 at 14:32
  • @CharisTheo Because iPad is not in the userAgent in iOS >= 13
    – Kzrbill
    Dec 20, 2019 at 9:35
  • but you are already checking for iPad iOS >= 13 in the second check or am I missing something?
    – Harry Theo
    Dec 20, 2019 at 16:48
  • navigator.maxTouchPoints isn't supported in iOS, so that check isn't going to do anything for you.
    – PaulC
    May 25, 2020 at 18:01
  • 2
    @PaulC, You are correct in that maxTouchPoints is undefined for iOS 12 and below, but kikiwora is on the right track since maxTouchPoints is supported in iOS 13. See my answer.
    – Bob Arlof
    May 29, 2020 at 21:28
22

None of the previous answers here work for all major browsers on all versions of iOS, including iOS 13. Here is a solution that works for Safari, Chrome and Firefox for all iOS versions:

var isIOS = (function () {
    var iosQuirkPresent = function () {
        var audio = new Audio();

        audio.volume = 0.5;
        return audio.volume === 1;   // volume cannot be changed from "1" on iOS 12 and below
    };

    var isIOS = /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.userAgent);
    var isAppleDevice = navigator.userAgent.includes('Macintosh');
    var isTouchScreen = navigator.maxTouchPoints >= 1;   // true for iOS 13 (and hopefully beyond)

    return isIOS || (isAppleDevice && (isTouchScreen || iosQuirkPresent()));
})();

Note that this code snippet was written with priority on readability, not conciseness or performance.

Explanation:

  • If the user agent contains any of "iPod|iPhone|iPad" then clearly the device is iOS. Otherwise, continue...

  • Any other user agent that does not contain "Macintosh" is not an Apple device and therefore cannot be iOS. Otherwise, it is an Apple device, so continue...

  • If maxTouchPoints has a value of 1 or greater then the Apple device has a touch screen and therefore must be iOS since there are no Macs with touch screens (kudos to kikiwora for mentioning maxTouchPoints). Note that maxTouchPoints is undefined for iOS 12 and below, so we need a different solution for that scenario...

  • iOS 12 and below has a quirk that does not exist in Mac OS. The quirk is that the volume property of an Audio element cannot be successfully set to any value other than 1. This is because Apple does not allow volume changes on the Audio element for iOS devices, but does for Mac OS. That quirk can be used as the final fallback method for distinguishing an iOS device from a Mac OS device.

5
  • It seems like this will have the side effect of actually changing the audio volume on non-iOS devices (in case that's important to anyone)
    – Tspoon
    Jul 3, 2020 at 15:58
  • 2
    @Tspoon, The provided code snippet creates a throw-away Audio element (if necessary). The element is not actually used to play sound in this case, and it does not affect the volume of other Audio elements you might employ in your system.
    – Bob Arlof
    Jul 4, 2020 at 16:54
  • the volume hack doesn't work - it returns 0.5 and then some thread in webkit resets it back to 1 at some point in the future.
    – Sean
    Mar 17, 2023 at 6:40
  • @Sean, Were you careful to test on an old iPad running iOS 12 or below? I just retested on an old iPad running iOS 12.5.7 (latest version available for that model iPad as of this writing), and confirmed that the Audio element's volume setting still cannot be changed in iOS 12 (I checked the value immediately following the assignment). However, I also noticed that iOS 12 now includes "iPad" in the user agent, so testing for the quirk is now longer needed for old iPads, at least those that are being updated. Either way, the snippet I originally provided continues to work as intended.
    – Bob Arlof
    Mar 22, 2023 at 2:07
  • @BobArlof I do have an oldish ipad but it's running 15.7.3 In my tests it momentarily sets the volume to say 0.5 and then about 0.1s later resets it to 1 again. I just did some user agent sniffing to detect it and block our volume controls. I dunno why Apple do these things...!
    – Sean
    Mar 22, 2023 at 6:08
19

This sets the variable _iOSDevice to true or false

_iOSDevice = !!navigator.platform.match(/iPhone|iPod|iPad/);
4
  • 5
    what does !! do?
    – patrick
    Jun 13, 2019 at 16:36
  • 7
    @astronought double negation is used to cast to a boolean
    – Vitim.us
    Jun 14, 2019 at 20:18
  • 10
    @astronought bang bang, you're boolean :D
    – Qback
    Jun 18, 2019 at 11:03
  • 6
    Using /iPhone|iPod|iPad/.test(navigator.platform) you can avoid the !!
    – lionello
    Oct 1, 2019 at 9:29
11

UPDATE: My original answer doesn't cover iPad in desktop mode (the default changes to desktop mode in upcoming iPadOS 13 and higher).
That's fine for my usecases, if it's not for you, use this update:

// iPhone and iPad including iPadOS 13+ regardless of desktop mode settings

iOSiPadOS = /^iP/.test(navigator.platform) ||
           /^Mac/.test(navigator.platform) && navigator.maxTouchPoints > 4;
  • This should be safe as long as
    • desktop Macs don't support touch events at all
    • or not more than 4 touch points (current iOS devices support 5 touch points)
  • It's fast because the regexp ^ first checks the starting position of the platform string and stops if there is no "iP" (faster than searching the long UA string until the end anyway)
  • It's safer than navigator.userAgent check as navigator.platform is much less likely faked
  • Detects iPhone / iPad Simulator

ORIGINAL ANSWER:
Wow, a lot of longish tricky code here. Keep it simple, please!

This one is IMHO fast, save, and working well:

 iOS = /^iP/.test(navigator.platform);

  // or, if you prefer it verbose:
 iOS = /^(iPhone|iPad|iPod)/.test(navigator.platform);
4
  • 1
    iOS = /^(iPhone|iPad|iPod)/.test(navigator.platform); rather than this i would do iOS = /^(iPhone|iPad|iPod)/.test(navigator.userAgent || navigator.vendor || navigator.platform); as a fallback measure cuz in my case navigator.platform didn't work, but doing it like later worked fine
    – 0xAnon
    Sep 19, 2019 at 16:20
  • 1
    navigator.platform didn't work? Are you really on iOS then?. Check with jeka.info/test/navigator.html . userAgent gives false positives because some vendors fake it to mimic Apple devices for whatever reasons. vendor just returns either Google Inc., Apple Computer, Inc., or nothing (in Firefox).
    – j.j.
    Oct 10, 2019 at 18:00
  • navigator.platform is being discouraged: "[it] should almost always be avoided in favor of feature detection."
    – A-Tech
    Jun 30, 2022 at 13:17
  • @A-TECH: this is is The Remaining of the "almost always" case. Example (stupid): All iOS devices have Zapf's "Optima" font installed. For some reasons you want to know if that font is available. Please giive me some feature-detecting code for this usecase!
    – j.j.
    Oct 11, 2023 at 21:19
10

If you are using Modernizr, you can add a custom test for it.

It doesn't matter which detection mode you decide to use (userAgent, navigator.vendor or navigator.platform), you can always wrap it up for a easier use later.

//Add Modernizr test
Modernizr.addTest('isios', function() {
    return navigator.userAgent.match(/(iPad|iPhone|iPod)/g);
});

//usage
if (Modernizr.isios) {
    //this adds ios class to body
    Modernizr.prefixed('ios');
} else {
    //this adds notios class to body
    Modernizr.prefixed('notios');
}
2
  • 2
    Be carefull, Modernizr automatically lowercase the name of the added test. (in your example, Modernizr.isiOS will never return true). Bad behavior of the lib in my view ...
    – Jscti
    Nov 5, 2014 at 10:04
  • 4
    Just tiny notice: you can simplify return x ? true : false to return Boolean(x) or just return !!x
    – tibalt
    Mar 7, 2016 at 10:21
8

A simplified, easy to extend version.

var iOS = ['iPad', 'iPhone', 'iPod'].indexOf(navigator.platform) >= 0;
3
  • 1
    If you also want this to work on iOS Simulator you can use: navigator.platform.replace(' Simulator', '').
    – Koraktor
    Feb 7, 2015 at 10:47
  • But it doesn't work, cause ['str'].indexOf('string') == -1
    – tibalt
    Sep 2, 2015 at 13:12
  • 1
    navigator.platform will be exactly 'iPad', 'iPhone' or 'iPod' unless the simulator is running.
    – Kory Nunn
    Oct 23, 2015 at 4:11
6

Detecting iOS (both <12, and 13+)

Community wiki, as edit queue says it is full and all other answers are currently outdated or incomplete.

const iOS_1to12 = /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform);

const iOS13_iPad = (navigator.platform === 'MacIntel' && navigator.maxTouchPoints > 1));

const iOS1to12quirk = function() {
  var audio = new Audio(); // temporary Audio object
  audio.volume = 0.5; // has no effect on iOS <= 12
  return audio.volume === 1;
};

const isIOS = !window.MSStream && (iOS_1to12 || iOS13_iPad || iOS1to12quirk());
1
  • 1
    'platform' is deprecated now Jun 16, 2022 at 14:38
4

It's probably worth answering that iPads running iOS 13 will have navigator.platform set to MacIntel, which means you'll need to find another way to detect iPadOS devices.

2

I wrote this a couple years ago but i believe it still works:

if(navigator.vendor != null && navigator.vendor.match(/Apple Computer, Inc./) && navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i) || (navigator.userAgent.match(/iPod/i))) 

    {

        alert("Ipod or Iphone");

    }

else if (navigator.vendor != null && navigator.vendor.match(/Apple Computer, Inc./) && navigator.userAgent.match(/iPad/i))  

    {

        alert("Ipad");

    }

else if (navigator.vendor != null && navigator.vendor.match(/Apple Computer, Inc./) && navigator.userAgent.indexOf('Safari') != -1)

    {

        alert("Safari");

    }

else if (navigator.vendor == null || navigator.vendor != null)

    {

        alert("Not Apple Based Browser");

    }
2

Wherever possible when adding Modernizr tests you should add a test for a feature, rather than a device or operating system. There's nothing wrong with adding ten tests all testing for iPhone if that's what it takes. Some things just can't be feature detected.

    Modernizr.addTest('inpagevideo', function ()
    {
        return navigator.userAgent.match(/(iPhone|iPod)/g) ? false : true;
    });

For instance on the iPhone (not the iPad) video cannot be played inline on a webpage, it opens up full screen. So I created a test 'no-inpage-video'

You can then use this in css (Modernizr adds a class .no-inpagevideo to the <html> tag if the test fails)

.no-inpagevideo video.product-video 
{
     display: none;
}

This will hide the video on iPhone (what I'm actually doing in this case is showing an alternative image with an onclick to play the video - I just don't want the default video player and play button to show).

1
2

If you're using React, There is great library for this kind of issues: REACT-UGENT. (Built with ua-parser-js.)

https://github.com/medipass/react-ugent

Available browsers are:

chrome, chromium, edge, firefox, ie, lynx, safari, opera

Available OS are:

android, blackberry, chromium os, debian, ios, linux, mac os, ubuntu, unix, windows

Available devices are:

console, computer, mobile, tablet, smarttv, wearable, embedded

Easy to use as:

<Ugent browser="safari" os="ios">
  <div>
    This text only shows on Safari on iOS.
  </div>
</Ugent>

If you're not using React, basically, you can use - ua-parser-js

https://github.com/faisalman/ua-parser-js

2

If you are still trying to check if is iOS or not, I recommend you to use this approach:

  1. Create a folder called helper
  2. Create a file called platform.ts or platform.js
  3. Export the function isIOS:
export const isIOS = () => {
    let platform = navigator?.userAgent || navigator?.platform || 'unknown'

    return /iPhone|iPod|iPad/.test(platform)
}

The result will be true if is an iPhone or iPod or Ipad or it will be false otherwise.

You may ask, why do I need to check navigator.userAgent || navigator.platform, well the reason is simple the second option used to be the default one but now it is deprecated and some browsers will stop supporting this in the future, the first one is more reliable.

You can check here about the deprecation that I mentioned above:

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Navigator/platform#:~:text=Deprecated%3A%20This%20feature%20is%20no,be%20kept%20for%20compatibility%20purposes.

Logging the userAgentData, userAgent and platform.

Using the function below, I received these logs:

    console.log({
        userAgentData: navigator?.userAgentData?.platform,
        userAgent: navigator?.userAgent,
        platform: navigator?.platform,
    })

    {
        "userAgentData": "",
        "userAgent": "Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 13_2_3 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/13.0.3 Mobile/15E148 Safari/604.1",
        "platform": "MacIntel"
    }

I was testing it on my Macbook and it worked on different browsers and operation systems. So, as you can see navigator?.userAgentData?.platform will not work at all.

I also didn't receive any errors related to my typescript, even though that I am using React to call this function.

Bonus, isAndroid

If you wondering how to check if is an Android platform, I suggest you don't follow the idea of doing the opposite of isIOS as:

const isAndroid = !isIOS();

The reason is quite simple, it will not work since desktops will be recognized as an Android platform. To solve this problem you just need to do this check:

export const isAndroid = () => {
    const ua = navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase() + navigator?.platform.toLowerCase();
    const isAndroid = ua.indexOf("android") > -1;

    return isAndroid;
}

The reason why we are checking navigator.userAgent plus navigator?.platform is to support old browsers and the new ones.

2
  • Will it be safe to remove navigator?.platform if that is going to be removed in future and only rely on navigator?.userAgent?
    – criccode
    Oct 18, 2022 at 6:30
  • 1
    Since this will be removed it means the result will be undefined but since we also want to target old browsers just in case, it makes sense to add it there. Oct 21, 2022 at 9:48
1

The user-agents on iOS devices say iPhone or iPad in them. I just filter based on those keywords.

3
  • 4
    There's also iPod Touches to consider. Jan 27, 2012 at 19:20
  • @DouglasGreenshields Correct. Forgot about that one but I believe it transmits its identity in the user-agent, as well. Jan 27, 2012 at 19:54
  • 3
    User agent of iPad safari will no longer include "iPad" from iPadOS 13.
    – Jonny
    Aug 30, 2019 at 6:08
1

There is no need to test navigator.userAgent or navigator.platform:

const isIOS = typeof navigator.standalone === 'boolean';

navigator.standalone is only set on iOS Safari. See MDN, Safari HTML Reference.

6
  • 1
    What if the browser is chrome?
    – IBG
    Oct 20, 2021 at 10:47
  • 1
    @IBG just tried and it returns "undefined" on iOs chrome. So this answer is not correct
    – strix25
    Nov 2, 2021 at 10:29
  • 1
    @IBG I just tried this on Firefox 38.1 on iPhone (iOS 14.3) and Chrome 95.0.4638.50 on iPad (iPadOS 15.0.2) and it worked on both
    – Jeffery To
    Nov 2, 2021 at 10:43
  • 1
    @strix25 are you sure you typed the code correctly?
    – Jeffery To
    Nov 2, 2021 at 10:44
  • Using the const in @JefferyTo's example above worked well for me with this conditional check: if (isIOS === true ) { //stuff for iOS } else {// stuff for all other }
    – Ronni DC
    May 20, 2022 at 14:10
0

You can also use includes

  const isApple = ['iPhone', 'iPad', 'iPod', 'iPad Simulator', 'iPhone Simulator', 'iPod Simulator',].includes(navigator.platform)
2
0

Because navigator.platform is deprecated and it is better to not use it anymore, I want to add an other solution.

You can filter on MacOS systems by checking the navigator.vendor. When the outcome is Apple Computer, Inc., you know it is MacOS.

1
0

this was my solution after suffering a lot its not perfect but hope to help someone, I have tried it and it’s and it exactly target iPad safari.

function detectSafariOnIpadOS() {
  var userAgent = navigator.userAgent;
  var isSafari = /^((?!chrome|android).)*safari/i.test(userAgent);
  var isIpad = /iPad/i.test(userAgent);
  var isMacintosh = /Macintosh/i.test(userAgent);
  var isTouchDevice = "ontouchend" in document;

  console.log("User Agent:", userAgent);
  console.log("detectSafariOnIpadOS result:", isSafari && (isIpad || (isMacintosh && isTouchDevice)));

return isSafari && (isIpad || (isMacintosh && isTouchDevice));
}
1
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Sep 4, 2023 at 3:23
0

Make use of Apple Pay JS API checks

`if (window.dw && window.dw.applepay && window.ApplePaySession && window.ApplePaySession.canMakePayments()) {

// do the needful

}`

0

For anyone looking to be compliant with PageSpeed Insights and Lighthouse best practices which flags "issues" found in the console for the use of navigator.userAgent (etc), this can help you (I gleaned this from Boostrap 5):

function getUAString() {
    let uaData = navigator.userAgentData;
    if (null !== uaData && uaData.brands) {
        return uaData.brands.map(item => item.brand + '/' + item.version).join(' ');
    }
    return navigator.userAgent;
}

const isIOS = /iP(hone|od|ad)/.test(getUAString());
-2

In my case the user agent was not good enought since in the Ipad the user agent was the same as in Mac OS, therefore I had to do a nasty trick:

var mql = window.matchMedia("(orientation: landscape)");

/**
 * If we are in landscape but the height is bigger than width
 */
if(mql.matches && window.screen.height > window.screen.width) {
    // IOS
} else {
    // Mac OS
}
0
-3

In order to detect the iOS version, one has to destructure the user agent with a Javascript code like this:

 var res = navigator.userAgent.match(/; CPU.*OS (\d_\d)/);
    if(res) {
        var strVer = res[res.length-1];
        strVer = strVer.replace("_", ".");
        version = strVer * 1;
    }
-3

var isiOSSafari = (navigator.userAgent.match(/like Mac OS X/i)) ? true: false;

1
  • This ternary operator is useless; test returns a boolean and can replace match
    – toastal
    Mar 31, 2021 at 7:06

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