How to Check if an iPhone Screen is Genuine Using UV Light (Perth Guide)
, 11 min reading time
, 11 min reading time
Learn the UV light method Apple technicians use to detect fake iPhone screens. Takes 10 seconds, costs $20, and can save you from buying a $600 phone with a cheap aftermarket display in Perth.
A customer once brought me an iPhone 14 they'd bought from Gumtree. "It's in perfect condition," they said. "The seller even showed me the screen working perfectly." But when I shined a UV light on it for three seconds, the truth came out: cheap aftermarket screen, installed poorly, already showing early signs of touch issues.
Here's what most Perth buyers don't know: you can't tell if an iPhone screen is genuine just by looking at it. Modern aftermarket screens look nearly identical to Apple's originals—same brightness, same colors, even the same bezels. But they can have serious problems that only show up weeks or months after purchase.
After four years of inspecting iPhones and testing hundreds of screens, I'm going to show you the same method Apple-certified technicians use to detect fake screens: the UV light test. It takes 10 seconds, costs less than $20, and can save you from a bad purchase.
Not all screen replacements are bad. Apple-authorized repairs using genuine parts? Those are fine. But the vast majority of screen replacements in Perth's second-hand market use cheap third-party screens from suppliers who prioritize cost over quality.
Common problems with aftermarket iPhone 14 screens:
I've seen phones where the screen looked perfect in a seller's photo, but in real use, the touch response was terrible, colors were off, and True Tone didn't work. By then, the buyer was stuck with a $600 phone that felt like a $200 knockoff.
The seller won't tell you: Most private sellers in Perth won't disclose screen replacements. They'll say "works perfectly" or "minor repair" without mentioning that it's a cheap aftermarket part that could fail in months.
UV light testing is the gold standard for detecting aftermarket iPhone screens. Apple-certified technicians use it, professional refurbishers use it, and now you can use it too.
Genuine Apple screens use specific adhesives and coatings that do not fluoresce (glow) under 365nm UV light. Most aftermarket screens use different materials that do fluoresce—they light up bright blue, green, or purple under UV.
It's not 100% foolproof (some high-end aftermarket screens now avoid fluorescent materials), but it catches 95% of cheap replacements instantly.
A 365nm UV flashlight (about $15-25 on Amazon or eBay Australia)
Important: It must be 365nm wavelength. Don't use 395nm or 400nm UV lights—they won't show the fluorescence clearly. Look for flashlights specifically marked "365nm" or "UV-A."
The test takes literally 10 seconds. If the screen glows under UV, it's aftermarket. If it stays dark (maybe a very faint, even glow), it's likely genuine.
What a genuine iPhone screen looks like under UV:
What an aftermarket iPhone screen looks like under UV:
Red flag: If you see a bright, neon-like glow—especially around the edges or in uneven patterns—it's 100% an aftermarket screen. Walk away or negotiate the price down significantly.
The UV test is the most reliable, but here are some backup methods for checking iPhone screen authenticity:
Go to Settings → General → About. If the screen was replaced with a non-genuine part, iOS 15+ will show a warning: "Unable to verify this iPhone has a genuine Apple display." This message appears even if the phone works fine—it's Apple's way of flagging aftermarket parts.
Note: This only works if the replacement was recent and the phone is on iOS 15 or later. Older iOS versions don't show this warning.
Look closely at the screen edges for signs of poor installation:
Genuine Apple screens fit perfectly flush. Poor-quality aftermarket screens often have visible gaps or misalignment.
Go to Settings → Display & Brightness → True Tone
If True Tone is grayed out or doesn't work, it's a strong indicator of an aftermarket screen. Many third-party screens can't properly replicate True Tone functionality because they lack the necessary sensors.
Simple but effective: "Has the screen ever been replaced?"
Honest sellers will tell you. Sketchy sellers will dodge the question ("I don't know," "I'm not sure," "It works fine"). If they can't give you a straight answer, assume the worst and bring a UV light to test it yourself.
Not necessarily a dealbreaker—but you need to adjust your expectations and price accordingly.
My rule: If a seller lists a phone as "excellent condition" or "original" but the UV test reveals an aftermarket screen they didn't disclose—walk away. That's a trust issue, and if they lied about the screen, what else are they hiding?
At Oloop, the UV light test is part of our standard TrueCheck™ 30+4 inspection protocol. Every single iPhone 14 that comes through gets tested under UV light—no exceptions.
What we do if we find an aftermarket screen:
We never hide component replacements. If a screen isn't genuine, you'll know before you buy—not after. That's the difference between professional inspection and crossing your fingers on Gumtree.
You don't need to be a phone repair expert to spot a fake iPhone screen. You just need a $20 UV flashlight and 10 seconds of your time. It's the fastest, most reliable way to verify what you're buying—whether you're meeting a private seller in a Perth car park or considering a refurbished phone online.
The UV test isn't about being paranoid—it's about being informed. If the screen is aftermarket, fine. Just make sure you know that before you pay, and make sure the price reflects it.
And if you'd rather skip the detective work entirely? That's why every Oloop phone comes with a TrueReport™ that documents exactly what we found—including screen authenticity, tested under UV light, verified with professional tools.
Every Oloop iPhone is UV-tested for screen authenticity. If we find any aftermarket parts, we document them clearly in your TrueReport™—no surprises, no guesswork.
Browse Verified iPhones →Written by Jason, Founder of Oloop | Based in Perth, WA | UV light screen testing since 2021