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Fake iPhone Call Screen Generator

Create realistic iPhone call screens — incoming, outgoing, in-progress, and ended. Download as PNG instantly.

Caller Info

Preview
Verizon
09:41
John Doe

John Doe

mobile

iPhone

Appearance

Background Style

Uses caller photo as blurred full-screen background

Status Bar

Build a Fake iPhone Call Screen in Seconds

You've seen it everywhere — the "I just got THE call!" tweet, the "mom called" TikTok, the YouTube creator who cuts away to their phone ringing. Creating that screenshot used to mean hunting for an app, dealing with watermarks, or rigging your actual phone for a photo.

This is a free, browser-based tool that builds a pixel-accurate iPhone call screen screenshot — incoming, outgoing, in-progress, and ended. No design experience needed. No downloads. No sign-up. Works instantly on any device with a modern browser.

And unlike most other generators, this one renders the right UI: call buttons in the correct positions, the blur-photo background that real iPhones display when a contact photo is set, the proper 6-button control grid during an in-progress call, and iOS-accurate Accept and Decline button colours (Apple green #34C759 and red #FF3B30 — not just generic browser green and red).

The Blur Photo Background — Most Realistic Detail

The single biggest visual improvement in this generator: the blurred photo background. When a caller has a contact photo on a real iPhone, iOS blurs and darkens that photo behind the caller's name and the accept/decline buttons. It's the visual detail that separates a convincing screenshot from an obvious fake.

Enable it by selecting "Photo Blur" as your background style — it's the default. Paste any image URL or upload a photo from your device, and the entire call screen background fills with a blurred, darkened version of that face. It looks exactly right.

Prefer a cleaner look? Switch to "Gradient" for the plain dark-to-black background — the same as iOS shows when no contact photo is available. Both are accurate to real iOS behaviour.

All Four iPhone Call States, Built Right

Incoming Call

The standard incoming call screen with photo, name, and call label. Two top buttons — "Remind Me" and "Message" — plus the green Accept and red Decline buttons at the bottom. For FaceTime calls, the Accept button icon switches from a phone handset to a video camera.

Outgoing Call

Shows the dialling state: "Calling…" or "Ringing…" with the caller's photo and name. Single red End button at the bottom. Use the Call Status option to choose between the two states — they're subtly different and each looks authentic.

In Progress

The active call screen. Shows a smaller photo, the call timer (set any duration — "00:42", "1:03:14", whatever fits), and the standard iOS 6-button control grid: mute, keypad, speaker, add call, FaceTime, and contacts. Red End button at bottom centre.

Call Ended

Post-call screen. Shows "Ended", "Missed Call", or "Call Declined" depending on the end status. Missed and declined statuses appear in red. Ended calls display the duration ("Call Ended · 0:42"). Two actions: "Message" and "Call Back".

Status Bar & Appearance Controls

Every field in the status bar is editable. Set the time (the classic "9:41" Apple demo time, or something more convincing), the carrier name (Verizon, EE, Jio, Telstra — whatever fits your audience), the network type (WiFi, LTE, or 5G), and the battery level.

Small details add up. A screenshot showing "100%" battery at "3:47 AM" looks wrong for a "good morning call" story. "AT&T" carrier on a UK-audience screenshot gets spotted immediately. Getting these right is what makes the difference between passable and convincing.

The FaceTime and Video Call toggles in the Appearance panel change the call mode without switching the call type. Toggle FaceTime to show "FaceTime Audio" as the subtitle and a camera icon on the Accept button. Toggle Video Call for a non-FaceTime video call mode.

Download Options

Two export buttons, two use cases. Both are for creative, educational, and entertainment use — do not use generated call screens to deceive anyone into believing they received a real call from a real person.

  • Download with Frame — Exports the complete black iPhone shell with the screen inside. Use this for device mockups, ad creatives, blog posts, and anywhere the phone hardware context adds realism.
  • Download without Frame — Exports just the call screen content, no phone border. Better for video compositing in After Effects, DaVinci Resolve, or Premiere, and for Figma mockups where you want to layer the screen over other content.

Both formats export at 2× resolution (retina quality), keeping text and icons sharp at any display size.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this completely free with no watermark?

Yes. Every feature is free: all four call states, photo upload, all appearance controls, and both download formats. No sign-up required, no watermarks on exports, no paid tier. The downloaded PNG is completely clean.

Does it work on mobile phones and tablets?

Yes, fully. The tool is responsive and works in any modern mobile browser. On smaller screens the phone preview shows at the top with settings below. Downloaded PNGs save to your device's photo library or downloads folder depending on your browser and OS.

Which iPhone model does this replicate?

The UI matches the standard iOS call screen design as of iOS 16–18. The call interface itself is visually consistent across all current iPhone models. We render a notch-style frame; we don't simulate the exact Dynamic Island shape of specific Pro models or exact camera cutout geometry of each model.

Can I use my own photo for the caller?

Yes. Click the "Upload" button next to the Caller Photo field to pick an image from your device. The photo is processed entirely in your browser using the FileReader API — nothing is uploaded to any server. You can also paste a public image URL from Unsplash, Pexels, or anywhere else for quick access.

What's the difference between Photo Blur and Gradient backgrounds?

"Photo Blur" takes the caller's photo and uses it as a blurred, darkened full-screen background — exactly how iOS renders incoming calls when the contact has a photo set. "Gradient" shows a plain dark gradient, which is what iOS shows when there's no contact photo. Both modes match real iOS behaviour.

How do I make it look like a FaceTime call?

Toggle the "FaceTime Call" switch in the Appearance panel. This changes the call subtitle to "FaceTime Audio" and switches the green Accept button icon from a phone handset to a video camera — exactly as it appears on real incoming FaceTime calls on iOS.

Can I download a transparent version with no background?

"Download without Frame" removes the black phone border, but the call screen itself always has a background (blur or gradient). If you need isolated UI elements with no background at all, you'll need a tool like Figma or Photoshop to layer-separate them after export.

Disclaimer

This tool is provided for creative, educational, and entertainment purposes only. The generated iPhone call screen images are fictional mockups and are not real screenshots from any Apple device or service. FakeMockup is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to Apple Inc. in any way. "iPhone", "FaceTime", and "iOS" are trademarks of Apple Inc. Use generated images responsibly and in compliance with all applicable laws. Do not use generated content to deceive, defraud, or misrepresent any person or organisation.