iOS Tags Patterns – How Top Apps Use Them

See how top iOS apps implement the Tags component — in real user flows, not isolated mockups. Compare variations across brands to find the right pattern for your own iPhone design.

Sign up to unlock this user flow

Try 3 Days
Search video thumbnail

Sign up to unlock this user flow

Try 3 Days
Onboarding question video thumbnail

Sign up to unlock this user flow

Try 3 Days
Profile video thumbnail

The iOS Tags in Real App Interfaces

The Tags is one of iOS design's most important building blocks, and how an app implements it often defines how polished the whole experience feels. On this page you'll find every documented example of Tags from the Page Flows iOS library, captured inside the actual user flows they belong to.

Why Seeing Tags in Context Matters

Studying Tags in context matters — you'll see when it's triggered, how it's styled, what content it contains, and how it exits. These details rarely show up in isolated component libraries, but they're what separates good Tags implementations from ones that feel clunky or out of place.

Browse Tags Patterns by Brand

Browse by brand to study a specific app's approach, or scan across examples to build a mental library of Tags patterns you can draw from when designing your own interface.

Frequently Asked Questions

What counts as a Tags in the iOS library?

The Tags category includes every documented instance of this component across the library, from classic iOS implementations to custom variants used by leading apps.

Are Tags examples shown alone or in context?

Always in context. Each example is tagged inside a full user flow, so you can see exactly when Tags appears, what triggers it, and how users interact with it.

How do I find Tags examples from specific brands?

Each example is tagged with its brand, so you can filter or search for Tags implementations from the apps most relevant to your work.

Can I find iOS Tags patterns across different app categories?

Yes. Because Tags appears across many app types (fintech, social, productivity, etc.), you can compare category-specific conventions and cross-category patterns.