How to create an app icon that stands out
Your app icon has one job: be recognizable in a grid of 30 other icons, at a size smaller than your thumbnail. Here's what that actually requires โ and how to build one free.
Why most app icons fail at 40 pixels
An app icon is designed on a screen at 1024ร1024 pixels, but it's judged on a home screen at roughly 60ร60 โ and in search results even smaller. Most icon design mistakes only become visible once you shrink the file down: text becomes an unreadable smear, gradients turn muddy, and fine detail disappears entirely.
The fix isn't a smarter export setting. It's designing for the small size from the start.
Three rules that hold up at any size
๐บ One focal shape
Pick a single symbol, letter, or glyph. Icons with two or three competing elements lose all of them when scaled down.
๐จ High contrast background
A bold gradient or solid color behind your glyph is what actually gets noticed in a crowded app drawer โ not the glyph itself.
๐ซ No text below 1024px
If your icon needs a word to explain it, the word won't survive scaling. Save text for your screenshots, not your icon.
The fastest way to test if your icon works
Shrink your 1024px design down to 64px and look at it from across the room. If you can't immediately tell what it is, it needs another pass. This is the same test Apple's own Human Interface Guidelines recommend, and it catches nearly every icon design mistake before you submit.
Frequently asked
What makes a good app icon?
It reads clearly at 40ร40 pixels, uses one strong shape instead of a detailed scene, and holds a consistent color identity across every export size.
Can I create an app icon for free?
Yes โ Tecowise's Icon Studio is free, with no watermark or signup, and exports every required App Store and Google Play size.
What's next after the icon?
Check the exact App Store icon size requirements before you submit, and see how iOS 18's light, dark and tinted modes affect your design.