My iPhone speaker is greyed out during calls, and I can’t hear or talk. How can I fix it?
Share
Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.
I ran into this issue on an iPhone a while back, and it was pretty frustrating. During calls, the speaker button was grayed out, and I couldn’t hear the other person or be heard myself. At first, I thought it was just a temporary glitch, so I restarted the phone and checked whether it was connected to a Bluetooth device or headphones. Sometimes the iPhone gets confused about where audio should be routed.
When that didn’t solve it, I tried a few other things, like making sure iOS was up to date and testing the microphone with the Voice Memos app. That’s a useful test because if Voice Memos won’t record properly, it often points to a deeper audio issue rather than a simple settings problem.
From what I’ve seen, this problem is usually caused by either a software bug or a hardware-related issue affecting the iPhone’s audio system. If the speaker button remains gray on every call, even after restarting the device and checking Bluetooth, there’s a good chance the phone isn’t detecting one of its audio components correctly.
My advice would be to start with the basics: restart the phone, turn Bluetooth off, test Voice Memos, and install any available iOS updates. If none of those steps help, it’s probably worth having the device inspected by a repair technician or Apple support. In many cases, people discover that the issue is hardware-related, especially if the phone was dropped, exposed to moisture, or had previous repair work done.
The good news is that it’s usually a fixable problem—it’s just a matter of determining whether it’s software-related or a hardware fault.