Android 17 Update Triggers Widespread Touchscreen Issues on Pixel Phones

Android 17 Update Triggers Widespread Touchscreen Issues on Pixel Phones

Android 17 Update Triggers Widespread Touchscreen Issues on Pixel Phones

Image: Generated via Google’s Nano Banana

Pixel users report Android 17 touchscreen issues, including reversed scrolling, missed taps, and unresponsive areas, while Google works on a fix.

Jun 24, 2026

Early adopters of Android 17 on Pixel phones are experiencing serious touchscreen issues.

Reports spreading across Reddit, Google’s forums, and issue tracking pages suggest that the problems are appearing across several Pixel generations and affecting core phone functions. Users describe strange behavior ranging from brief periods when the display stops responding to touch to cases where scrolling gestures appear to reverse direction.

Android Authority first highlighted the issue after users described erratic touchscreen behavior shortly after updating. According to reports, the problems have surfaced on Pixel 10, Pixel 9, Pixel 8, and Pixel 7 devices. The issue does not appear limited to one app or one part of the operating system. Reports say the behavior can appear in menus, apps, and across the broader interface.

Touch inputs going the wrong way

Some users say basic actions such as scrolling through feeds or navigating apps have become unpredictable.

“Once in a while (maybe 1 in 10), the screen scrolls in the opposite direction of my finger,” the Reddit user wrote, according to Android Police. Other users report taps failing to register entirely, while some say parts of the display temporarily stop responding.

Separately, 9to5Google reported another touchscreen issue tied to landscape orientation. According to user reports and the publication’s own testing, some devices stop recognizing touches near the top portion of the screen while apps are displayed horizontally.

The publication said it reproduced the problem on a Pixel 10 Pro XL. The issue reportedly affects video playback apps such as YouTube, but users say it can also appear in other landscape-mode applications.

More Google coverage

Google acknowledges the issue and workarounds emerge

According to Android Authority, Google is aware of the situation, and an official PixelCommunity Reddit account has suggested clearing the Pixel Launcher cache as a first step.

However, multiple users say the fix has not resolved the problem for them. Other temporary workarounds being shared include disabling “Smooth Display” on affected devices. Some users report improved scrolling behavior after turning it off, though results appear inconsistent across devices.

Additional suggestions circulating in community forums include restarting in Safe Mode or disabling certain accessibility features, but no confirmed fix works universally.

Advertisement

A rocky start for the new OS

The touchscreen drama is just the latest domino to fall in a highly turbulent rollout for Android 17. Pixel owners have spent the last week flag-polling a variety of distinct technical headaches brought on by the upgrade.

Reports indicate that early upgraders have already experienced frustrating 5G network drops and localized Wi-Fi glitches that cut off access to crucial Google apps such as Gmail, YouTube, and the Play Store for users whose home routers do not have IPv6 enabled. Additionally, a work profile conflict has been causing home screen widgets to vanish completely.

For users who have not yet installed Android 17, experts suggest patience. Until Google releases its first bug-fix update, waiting may be the safer option.

Also read: Google’s Android developer verification timeline sets new requirements for app developers distributing software on certified Android devices.

Aminu Abdullahi

Aminu Abdullahi is a B2C and B2B technology and finance writer with more than six years of experience covering enterprise IT, cybersecurity, cloud computing, artificial intelligence, fintech, business software, and emerging technologies. His work has appeared in publications including TechRepublic, eWEEK, Channel Insider, Geekflare, Enterprise Networking Planet, eSecurity Planet, CIO Insight, and Webopedia. With a technical background in computer science, he specializes in translating complex technology topics into clear, accessible content for business leaders and decision-makers.