Android adaptive icons explained
Adaptive icons let one icon design adapt to circle, squircle, or rounded-square launchers without ever looking cropped wrong. Here's how the layers actually work.
Three layers, one icon
๐ผ Foreground
Your glyph, on a transparent background, kept inside the safe zone so any launcher mask can crop the edges freely.
๐จ Background
A full-bleed color or image layer sitting behind the foreground โ no important content here, since launchers may add parallax.
โช Monochrome
Android 13+'s themed-icon layer: a single-color silhouette the launcher recolors to match the wallpaper.
The safe zone, precisely
Google specifies a 108ร108dp canvas per layer, with a centered 66dp "safe zone" circle โ about 61% of the canvas. Anything you place outside that circle risks being clipped, since different launchers apply different mask shapes (circle, squircle, rounded square) at runtime. Design your foreground glyph to live entirely inside that circle and it'll survive every launcher unchanged.
Why this differs from your Play Store icon
The adaptive icon is what appears on a device's home screen and app drawer. Your Play Store listing icon is a separate, flat 512ร512 asset used only in the store itself โ the two are related but exported differently.
Frequently asked
What is the safe zone in an adaptive icon?
A centered circle covering about 61% of the foreground layer โ content outside it may be cropped by some launcher masks.
What's the monochrome layer for?
Android 13+ themed icons: a single-color silhouette the launcher tints to match the wallpaper.
What does "adaptive icon pack apk" mean?
See our adaptive icon pack APK guide for a plain-language explanation.