Plum iOS App – Full User Flow Library

Explore the Plum iOS app through recorded user flows, annotated screen captures, and UX decisions. See exactly how Plum designs its iPhone experience across onboarding, core tasks, and settings.

Plum iOS App — User Flows and Screens

The Plum iOS app is one of many products in our library of recorded mobile experiences. On this page you'll find every documented flow inside Plum for iOS — from first-run onboarding through everyday tasks — captured as a full screen recording and broken down screen by screen.

How Plum Designs for iPhone

Rather than showing isolated screenshots, each flow preserves the full sequence: how Plum introduces itself to new users, how it handles key interactions, how it transitions between states, and how it recovers from errors. These details are where real design decisions live, and they're impossible to study from static images alone.

Who Benchmarks Plum on iOS

Designers, product managers, and researchers use this reference to benchmark against Plum, to understand a competitor's UX, or to borrow proven patterns for their own iOS work. Every flow is tagged by type, so you can jump directly to the moments most relevant to your project.

Frequently Asked Questions

What can I learn from the Plum iOS app flows?

You can study every documented user journey inside Plum — onboarding, core features, settings, and more — captured as full screen recordings rather than static screenshots, so you see exactly how the app guides users.

How often are Plum flows updated?

Flows are refreshed when Plum ships major redesigns or new features, so the recordings reflect current iOS design decisions rather than outdated versions.

Can I download the Plum designs or assets?

No. Page Flows is a design research library — you watch and study the flows for inspiration and benchmarking, but you don't download the brand's assets.

How does Plum on iOS compare to its Android or web versions?

If Plum appears on other platforms in our library, you can cross-reference those pages to compare design decisions — especially useful for understanding platform-specific adaptations.