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How to Create iPad Mini (6th gen) Screenshots

Step-by-step guide to creating App Store-ready screenshots for iPad Mini (6th gen) at 1488×2266 pixels.

8-Step Guide for iPad Mini (6th gen) Screenshots

  1. Set up your capture environment — Open Xcode, select iPad Mini (6th gen) from the simulator device list, and launch your app. Alternatively, connect a physical iPad Mini (6th gen) to your Mac. For simulator screenshots, use Cmd+S or File → Save Screen. Ensure your app displays real, attractive content — never capture empty states.
  2. Prepare your app content — Before capturing, populate your app with realistic demo data. Names, messages, images, numbers — everything should look like an active user's experience. Sign into any test accounts and navigate to the screens you want to feature.
  3. Capture raw screenshots at 1488×2266px — Take screenshots of each screen you want to feature. In the Simulator, each screenshot saves as a PNG at the exact device resolution. On a physical device, press Side Button + Volume Up simultaneously. Capture more screens than you'll need — you want options when assembling your final set.
  4. Plan your screenshot narrative — Arrange your captured screens in order of impact. Start with your strongest value proposition (the screenshot users see in search results), progress through key features, and end with a call-to-action. For iPad Mini (6th gen)'s larger screen, you can show more detail per screenshot — take advantage of the extra space to display richer UI content.
  5. Design screenshot frames and backgrounds — Using AppFrames or your design tool of choice, create the visual framework for each screenshot. Add device frames (iPad Mini (6th gen) bezels), background colors or gradients, headline text, and optional subtitles. Keep headlines to 3-5 words. At 326 PPI, iPad Mini (6th gen) renders text crisply — use minimum 40pt font for headlines to ensure readability at thumbnail size.
  6. Add compelling copy — Write a short, benefit-focused headline for each screenshot. Focus on what the user gains: "Save 2 Hours Daily" not "Task Management Feature." Add an optional subtitle with a specific detail or social proof number. App Store users scan screenshots quickly — you have about 2 seconds per screenshot to communicate value.
  7. Export at exact dimensions — Export each screenshot as PNG at exactly 1488×2266px. Double-check dimensions before uploading — the App Store rejects incorrect sizes. File size must be under 10 MB. Use sRGB or Display P3 color space. In Figma, export at 1x; in Photoshop, verify via Image → Image Size; in AppFrames, dimensions are set automatically.
  8. Upload and verify in App Store Connect — In App Store Connect, go to your app → select the version → scroll to Screenshots. Upload to the "iPad" display size category. Preview the listing on multiple device sizes to ensure everything renders correctly. Check that screenshot order matches your planned narrative.

Tips Specific to iPad Mini (6th gen)

Checklist Before Uploading

Troubleshooting

⚠️ Screenshots rejected — wrong resolution

Verify your screenshots are exactly 1488×2266px (portrait) or 2266×1488px (landscape). Common mistake: exporting at 1x instead of 2xx scale in design tools. In Figma, select the frame and check export settings. In Photoshop, use Image → Image Size to verify. If using AppFrames, dimensions are handled automatically.

⚠️ Text is unreadable at thumbnail size

App Store search results show screenshots at approximately 120×260px. At this size, body text is invisible — only headlines matter. Use minimum 40pt font (at 1488px canvas width) for main headlines, and test by zooming out to 10% in your design tool. If you can't read it zoomed out, users can't read it in the store.

⚠️ Colors look different on the App Store

This usually means a color space mismatch. iPad Mini (6th gen) supports sRGB or Display P3. Export your screenshots in sRGB for maximum compatibility. In Figma: File → Export Settings → Color Profile: sRGB. In Photoshop: Edit → Convert to Profile → sRGB IEC61966-2.1.

⚠️ Screenshots look blurry or pixelated

Never upscale screenshots. If your source image is lower resolution than 1488×2266px, recapture at the correct resolution. Common cause: taking screenshots in a simulator set to a different device, then resizing. Always capture in a iPad Mini (6th gen) simulator or at the exact target resolution.

⚠️ App Store Connect won't accept my upload

Check these common causes: 1) File size exceeds 10 MB — compress with TinyPNG. 2) Image has transparency — flatten to a solid background. 3) File is corrupt — re-export from your design tool. 4) Wrong file format — use PNG or JPEG only (not WebP, HEIC, or TIFF). 5) Too many screenshots — maximum 10 per device size.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I take screenshots for iPad Mini (6th gen)?

You can capture iPad Mini (6th gen) screenshots using the Xcode Simulator (select iPad Mini (6th gen) from the device list), or take screenshots directly on a physical device using the side button + volume up combination. For App Store screenshots, you'll want to add frames, text, and backgrounds using a tool like AppFrames.

What resolution should iPad Mini (6th gen) screenshots be?

iPad Mini (6th gen) screenshots must be exactly 1488 × 2266 pixels in portrait orientation, or 2266 × 1488 pixels in landscape. The App Store will reject screenshots at incorrect resolutions.

How many screenshots do I need for iPad Mini (6th gen)?

The App Store requires a minimum of 1 screenshot and allows up to 10 per device size. We recommend using all 10 slots to maximize conversion.

Can I use the same screenshots for all device sizes?

No — Apple requires screenshots at specific resolutions for each device class. You need at minimum the 6.7" (Pro Max) and 6.1" sizes. The App Store will scale screenshots for similar-sized devices, but the primary sizes must be exact.

Should I show the status bar in iPad Mini (6th gen) screenshots?

It depends on your design. Apple allows both options. Showing the status bar makes screenshots look like real device usage, while hiding it gives you more space for content. If you show it, make sure the time, battery, and signal are clean. Either way, be consistent across your screenshot set.

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