If your iPad screen won’t rotate, toggle Rotation Lock off, try a built-in app, then restart and update iPadOS.
Nothing kills a comfy reading or movie moment like a stubborn portrait view. If your tablet stays stuck in one orientation, you can fix it with a few quick checks. This guide gives you clear steps, plain language, and safe links so you can get back to smooth flipping between portrait and landscape without fuss.
iPad Screen Not Rotating? Fast Fixes That Work
Start with the easy wins. These take seconds and often clear the snag without digging through deep settings or resets.
Quick Checklist
Run through the items below in order. Stop when the screen rotates again.
| Step | Where | What You’ll See |
|---|---|---|
| Turn Off Rotation Lock | Swipe down from top-right > Control Center > Rotation Lock | Lock icon turns gray; rotate the iPad to test. |
| Test In A Built-In App | Open Safari, Photos, or Messages | These support both views. If they rotate, the issue is app-specific. |
| Try The Home Screen | Go to Home, rotate the device | Most models rotate the Home screen; some older ones don’t. |
| Restart The iPad | Shut down, wait 30 seconds, turn back on | After reboot, test rotation again. |
| Update iPadOS | Settings > General > Software Update | Install the update, then retry rotation. |
| Check Side Switch (Older Models) | Settings > General > Use Side Switch To | If set to Lock Rotation, flip the switch off. |
| Check Accessibility Zoom | Settings > Accessibility > Zoom | Turn off Zoom if the view seems stuck or cropped. |
Understand How Rotation Works On iPad
Your tablet uses motion sensors to switch views as you turn it. Most Apple apps support both portrait and landscape. Some third-party tools choose a single view by design. If one app never flips while Safari does, the app likely limits orientation on purpose. A quick check in a built-in app tells you whether you’re dealing with a setting or an app design choice.
Step-By-Step: Fix Rotation Problems
1) Turn Off Rotation Lock
Open Control Center by swiping down from the top-right corner. Tap the Rotation Lock icon (padlock with a circular arrow). Gray means off. Red means on. Turn it off, then tilt the device slowly. Many rotation hiccups end here. For Apple’s official walkthrough on rotation behavior, see the page on how to rotate the screen, which also notes that some apps won’t rotate by design (link included below).
2) Try A Known-Good App
Open Safari or Photos and rotate the device. If these flip correctly, the problem sits with a single app. Close the stuck app, update it, or reinstall if needed. If nothing rotates anywhere, keep going.
3) Restart Or Force Restart
A standard restart clears minor system jams. Power off, wait half a minute, then power on again. If the touchscreen won’t respond, use a force restart combo for your model. Apple documents both methods clearly; a reboot often restores rotation with no data loss.
4) Update iPadOS
Install the latest system version from Settings > General > Software Update. Fixes for sensor drivers and Control Center bugs land through these updates, and they’re quick to apply on Wi-Fi.
5) Close And Reopen The App
Swipe up from the bottom and hold to view the app switcher, then swipe the app away. Launch it again and test. This clears a bad layout state without touching your files.
6) Check Display Settings That Affect Perception
A heavy Accessibility Zoom setting can make the interface look locked or clipped. Go to Settings > Accessibility > Zoom and toggle it off. If you rely on magnification, switch to Window Zoom so the rest of the screen can rotate freely.
Older Models With A Side Switch
Some earlier tablets include a physical switch near the volume buttons. That switch can mute the device or lock orientation, depending on a setting. Open Settings > General and find “Use Side Switch To.” If it is set to Lock Rotation, flip the switch toward the back to unlock the view. Newer models handle Rotation Lock only in Control Center, so you might not see this option on a recent device.
Why One App Stays Stuck While Others Rotate
App behavior drives part of the story. Many video tools force landscape for a wider canvas. A few reading apps choose portrait for comfortable scrolling. When an app chooses a single view, Rotation Lock won’t override it. The fastest test is to open Safari, turn the device, and see if the tab bar slides to a side view. If it does, the hardware and sensors are fine.
Where To Place The Official Links
Two official pages are handy while you work through the steps:
- Rotate the screen on your iPad — shows Rotation Lock, Control Center access, and notes about apps that don’t rotate.
- Restart your iPad — lists restart and force restart steps for different models.
Open them in a new tab so you can follow along without losing your place.
Force Restart Combos By Model
If the touchscreen is frozen, a force restart can clear a stuck layout. Use the right button combo for your device type, then test rotation again.
| Model Type | Buttons | Use When |
|---|---|---|
| iPad With Face ID | Press and release Volume Up, press and release Volume Down, then hold Top until the logo appears. | Screen won’t respond or rotation stays stuck across apps. |
| iPad With Top Button Touch ID | Same combo as Face ID: Up, Down, hold Top. | You can’t power off the normal way. |
| iPad With Home Button | Hold Home and Top together until the logo appears. | Touch input is frozen; no control center access. |
Extra Checks That Help
Remove A Bulky Case
Some cases press the buttons or keep the device at a shallow angle that confuses the sensor. Take the case off, rotate the device through a full 90°, and see if the view changes.
Rotate Slowly And Hold For A Beat
The sensor works best with a clear movement and a short pause. Turn the tablet to landscape, hold for two seconds, then return to portrait. Quick flips can miss the trigger.
Check Display Zoom And Text Size
If text looks oversized and parts of the interface seem off-screen, head to Settings > Accessibility > Zoom and set Zoom to off for testing. You can bring it back later with a more flexible mode so rotation remains smooth.
When It Points To Hardware
If Rotation Lock is off, Apple apps don’t rotate, a restart didn’t help, and updates are current, you might have a sensor issue. Book a visit with a technician or start a chat with Apple. Share the checks you’ve already done, which speeds up the diagnosis. Back up your data before any service visit.
Safe Workflow To Troubleshoot
Here’s a simple path that keeps your data safe:
- Toggle Rotation Lock off in Control Center.
- Test with Safari and Photos.
- Restart the device; force restart only if needed.
- Install any iPadOS update.
- Review Zoom in Accessibility.
- Check the side switch setting on older hardware.
- Try without a case.
- Contact Apple if none of the above restore rotation.
Prevent The Problem From Returning
- Keep iPadOS current so fixes for sensors and Control Center land quickly.
- Close rarely used apps so one stuck layout doesn’t linger in the background.
- Use a case that doesn’t ride the buttons or block the top edge.
- Learn the Rotation Lock icon in Control Center so you can spot it at a glance.
Why This Guide Works
These steps line up with Apple’s own directions, with a few field tips from day-to-day use. You get a short checklist, then deeper fixes if needed. Most rotation issues end with Rotation Lock, an app that prefers one view, or a quick reboot. The rest trace to settings that change how the screen looks or to hardware that needs service.
Quick Reference Recap
- Rotation Lock: Control Center > tap the lock with the circular arrow.
- Built-in app test: Safari or Photos should flip both ways.
- Restart: power down and back up; force restart only when the screen is unresponsive.
- Update: Settings > General > Software Update.
- Accessibility Zoom: turn off to rule out a stuck view.
- Side switch (older models): Settings > General > Use Side Switch To.
Next Steps If You Still See No Rotation
Gather a quick log: which apps fail, what you tried, your current iPadOS version, and whether Rotation Lock shows off. With that list, contact Apple so a technician can run a sensor test and guide you to a fix or repair. Back up with iCloud or a computer first to keep your photos and files safe.
