How To Get Double Tap Gesture On Any Apple Watch

Enable and Use Double Tap Gesture on Older Apple Watch

Apple claimed that the double tap gesture is only possible because of the updated neural engine in the S9 SiP that can better process data from the accelerometer, gyroscope, and optical heart rate sensor. However, anyone with an Apple Watch Series 3 and later model can enable and use the double tap-like gesture to get the feature working for many of the same use cases right now. In fact, you can also get the Apple Watch 9’s Double Tap gesture on Galaxy Watches.

Via Quick Actions

Open the Watch app on your iPhone and select the Accessibility option. Here, scroll down and tap the Quick Actions option in the Motor section. Now, choose the ON option at the top and you are done.

Now, every time a quick Action is available, you will see a prompt on your Apple Watch to Double Pinch to perform a specific quick action such as answering calls, playing & pausing music, clicking a photo by camera shutter, and more.
Also, in case you miss a prompt, a button with a blue outline will appear on your Apple Watch screen, and you can use a double pinch/tap to select it.
I have been using this feature for quite a while now and found it to work well in most use cases, and was able to quickly pick up calls on my Apple Watch Series 7 with the double tap/pinch gesture. I also used this quick action to control the camera shutter, music playback, and workout. This is how the double tap gesture prompt appears on the Apple Watch Series 7:

Via AssistiveTouch

While Apple added the new double tap gesture to the Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 only, there has been a full-featured gesture control called Assistive Touch on the Apple Watch for quite some time now. With Assistive Touch, you can customize various gestures to control your Apple Watch and take gesture control on the Apple Watch to the next level. Here’s how:

Open the Watch app on your iPhone and select the Accessibility option. Here, scroll down and tap the Quick Actions option in the Motor section. Now, toggle ON AssitiveTouch.

Tap the Hand Gestures option in the Inputs section, then toggle on Hand Gestures. Here, you can customize what actions you can perform using gestures like Pinch, Double Pinch, Clench, and Double Clench.

By default, Double Clench is the default gesture to activate the AssistiveTouch on your Apple Watch, you can also change that from the bottom of the Hand Gestures menu.
So, what are your thoughts on gesture control on the Apple Watch? Have you used Quick Action or AssistiveTouch on your Apple Watch? How do you plan to use the Assistive touch to customize gestures? Or Do you plan to upgrade to the Apple Watch Series 9 or Ultra 2 to experience the double tap gesture? Do tell us in the comments!