Android Accessibility Suite

4.0
3.89M reviews
10B+
Downloads
Content rating
Everyone
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About this app

Android Accessibility Suite is a collection of accessibility apps that help you use your Android device eyes-free or with a switch device.

Android Accessibility Suite includes:
• Accessibility Menu: Use this large on-screen menu to lock your phone, control volume and brightness, take screenshots and more.
• Select to Speak: Select items on your screen and hear them read aloud.
• TalkBack screen reader: Get spoken feedback, control your device with gestures and type with the on-screen braille keyboard.

To get started:
1. Open your device's Settings app.
2. Select Accessibility.
3. Select Accessibility Menu, Select to Speak or TalkBack.

Android Accessibility Suite requires Android 6 (Android M) or later. To use TalkBack for Wear, you'll need Wear OS 3.0 or later.

Permissions notice
• Phone: Android Accessibility Suite observes the phone state so that it can adapt announcements to your call status.
• Accessibility Service: Because this app is an accessibility service, it can observe your actions, retrieve window content and observe text that you type.
• Notifications: When you allow this permission, TalkBack can notify you about updates.
Updated on
12 Sept 2024

Data safety

Safety starts with understanding how developers collect and share your data. Data privacy and security practices may vary based on your use, region and age The developer provided this information and may update it over time.
No data shared with third parties
Learn more about how developers declare sharing
This app may collect these data types
App activity, App info and performance and Device or other IDs
Data is encrypted in transit
Data can’t be deleted

Ratings and reviews

4.0
3.72M reviews
Meme
17 September 2024
I'm pretty sure this is being used for malicious reasons. It has some wonderful features for those who need it. But I believe security-wise some things have been overlooked or ignored because my device shows usage of features I have never used in my Chrome logs. I've never used a switch device or know how. So I'm not positive about this, but based on odd things happening on my device that shouldn't and finding that, I believe features can be used for device access. And not just your own.
98 people found this review helpful
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Dimitri Ajazi
13 October 2024
The Accessibility button, whether floating or in the Navigation Bar, needs to be...more accessible. Look to Android 10's 2-button navbar option (the one with the "pill"), with the little Acc. stick figure added to the right, for guidance. Bring that back or shift all navbar buttons to the left to make evenly-spaced room for a fourth (Acc.) button. The Acc. button's current navbar location is terrible, and an iOS-aping floating button is an eyesore no matter how much it's dimmed when not in use.
7 people found this review helpful
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Rachael R
16 August 2024
Dragging around the Text to speak button is really annoying and it feels like it's always in the way. I'd rather it be on the bottom as a button (especially since I don't use gesture controls). Also, during migraines, it would be really helpful if I could put a green color filter on. Unfortunately, it looks like the only color filter options are for color blindness, so I can't do a single color filter easily. If those 2 things were fixed, I'd switch this to 5 stars.
106 people found this review helpful
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What's new

TalkBack 15.0
• Detailed image descriptions with generative AI
• More verbosity options for symbols and punctuation
• New text editing shortcuts for braille

TalkBack on Wear OS 15.0
• Bug fixes