Ifaeveus 2 Pack Privacy Screen Protector for iPhone 15 Plus Tempered Glass 6.7inch Private Glass Anti-Spy Anti-Blue Light Eye Protection Anti-Scratch Full Coverage No Bubble Review

Let's be honest: privacy screen protectors are a niche buy. You don't need one until you really need one — commuting on a packed train, working in an open office, or just tired of the person next to you at the coffee shop casually reading your messages. The Ifaeveus 2-Pack for iPhone 15 Plus promises privacy, blue light filtering, scratch resistance, and a bubble-free install all in one package. That's a lot to ask of a budget accessory. Here's what you actually get.
What the Privacy Filter Actually Does
The core feature here is the anti-spy filter — a micro-louver technology that blacks out the screen for anyone viewing from more than roughly 30 degrees to either side. Straight-on visibility is fine. It works. If you're sitting next to a stranger, they're not reading your screen. That's the job, and it does it.
The blue light filtering is a secondary benefit that's harder to objectively evaluate, but the glass does have a slight warm tint compared to a standard clear protector. Whether that meaningfully reduces eye strain in daily use is debatable, but it's a real coating, not marketing fluff.

Installation: The Make-or-Break Moment
Privacy protectors are notoriously tricky to apply because any misalignment means you've wasted the one thing you can't get back — the adhesive seal. The Ifaeveus pack includes alignment tools, and the 2-pack gives you a second chance if the first attempt goes sideways. The "no bubble" claim holds up reasonably well when you follow the included instructions carefully and apply in a dust-free environment. That said, "full coverage" is a slight stretch — the protector covers the main display area well, but like most tempered glass protectors at this price point, the very edge coverage near the curved border of the 15 Plus can leave a thin gap.
The Trade-offs You Should Know Before Buying
Privacy screen protectors always come with compromises, and this one is no exception. The main hit is brightness: the filter noticeably darkens your display, especially outdoors. You'll compensate by cranking screen brightness, which in turn drains battery faster. That's not a flaw unique to this product — it's physics — but if you use your phone heavily outside, factor that in.
Touch sensitivity is acceptable. It's not as crisp as a bare screen or a high-end clear protector, but for everyday scrolling and typing it's fine. Face ID works normally through the glass. The hardness rating should hold up against keys and everyday pocket debris.

One thing worth flagging: the anti-spy filter also affects screen-sharing and video watching with someone beside you — intentionally or otherwise. If you regularly show someone your phone screen (a partner, colleague, or friend), you'll both need to be directly in front of the display. It sounds obvious, but it catches people off guard in practice.
Value at This Price Point
The 2-pack format is genuinely useful. One for now, one for when you crack or scratch the first. At the budget price this sells for, getting two units is probably the strongest argument in its favor. You're not paying premium glass quality here — the clarity straight-on is decent but not exceptional, and it won't match what you'd get from a Belkin or Zagg equivalent. But for travelers, transit commuters, healthcare workers, or anyone who handles sensitive information in public, the core privacy function delivers enough value to justify the buy.

Who Should Buy This
- Commuters who use transit and handle work email or sensitive messages on their phone
- Anyone in open-plan offices or shared workspaces
- Budget-conscious buyers who want basic privacy protection without spending on a premium brand
- People who break screen protectors frequently — the 2-pack safety net is real value
Who Should Skip It
- Heavy outdoor users who need maximum brightness and color accuracy
- Media consumers who watch video or share their screen with others regularly
- Anyone who finds the blue tint or reduced clarity distracting over long use sessions
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Does the privacy filter affect Face ID on iPhone 15 Plus?
A: No — Face ID functions normally through the tempered glass. The filter does not interfere with the Face ID sensor.
Q: How dark does the screen get with the privacy filter installed?
A: The screen is noticeably dimmer, particularly outdoors. Most users compensate by increasing screen brightness manually, which increases battery consumption.
Q: Is the 2-pack worth it compared to buying a single protector?
A: Yes. Screen protectors get cracked or damaged over time, and having a backup on hand means you don't need to reorder. It's one of the better value aspects of this package.
Q: Does it work with cases?
A: Standard slim cases are generally compatible. Thick or raised-bezel cases may cause edge-lifting over time, which is common with most tempered glass protectors at this size.
Q: Does the blue light filter actually reduce eye strain?
A: The glass includes a real blue light filtering coating that adds a slight warm tint. Measurable eye strain reduction is difficult to quantify, but the coating is present — this isn't purely a marketing claim.
— Lifestyle Lead Editor, CPrice
Posted on March 21, 2026