Why the iOS Notifications & Alerts Screen Matters
The Notifications & Alerts screen is a high-stakes surface in many iOS apps — often the moment where a user either engages or drops off. This page collects Notifications & Alerts designs from across the iOS library, letting you compare fifty approaches to the same design problem in one view.
Real iOS Notifications & Alerts Examples, Tagged by Brand
Each example is a real screen from a live iOS app, tagged with the brand and context it comes from. You can see how apps in completely different categories — fintech, entertainment, productivity — approach their Notifications & Alerts screens, and spot the conventions that work as well as the bold breaks from convention.
Ground Your Notifications & Alerts Design in Production Patterns
This view is especially useful early in a project, when you're defining what "good" looks like for your own Notifications & Alerts screen. Rather than sketching from imagination, you can ground your work in real, production-validated patterns.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many iOS Notifications & Alerts screen examples are available?
The library contains real Notifications & Alerts screen captures from many of the leading iOS apps in our database, with new examples added as apps ship redesigns.
Can I filter Notifications & Alerts screens by app category?
Yes. You can narrow to Notifications & Alerts screens from specific industries (fintech, social, health, etc.) to find the most relevant examples for your use case.
Are the Notifications & Alerts screens shown in context of their flow?
Each screen is captured within its full user flow, so you can click through and see how users actually arrive at and leave the Notifications & Alerts screen in the broader experience.
How does the iOS Notifications & Alerts screen differ from Android?
iOS Notifications & Alerts screens often follow Human Interface Guidelines, with specific gestures, safe-area handling, and visual patterns that differ from Material Design on Android. You can compare them by visiting the Android equivalents.