How can I scale Adobe software UIs on a high density display?

John Manly's answer works for Adobe CC as of the 2014 update. Sadly that option doesn't exist in pre-CC and it sounds like Adobe have no plans to fix this.

If you're on CS6 on Windows, there's a hack described here which works on Windows 7 and 8. Warning: it involves hacking the registry, to enable 'external manifests'. See this question regarding possible risks.

Here's the link: http://surfaceproartist.com/blog/2013/12/11/hack-makes-photoshop-and-illustrator-readable-on-surface-pro

It allows you to make AI and PS auto-scale with everything else according to your Control Panel\Appearance and Personalization\Display settings. Be aware, however, that this makes everything, including the appearance of your artwork, slightly grainy as if it was a pixel image that had been scaled up, and that the same Windows scaling applies to Adobe stuff as everything else including web browser etc. After trying every possible combination of settings, for me they all either scaled Adobe too much or everything else too little, or both, and I ended up undoing all of this and simply turning the resolution down one notch. But it might be an option for people with different personal preferences.

Here are the key steps. Before editing the registry, I recommend reading that whole article, and the comments.

  1. Enable Windows to prioritise external manifests by creating and setting this registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\SideBySide\PreferExternalManifest (DWORD) to 1 as mentioned here (no need to install the mentioned hotfix, just create the registry key) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/912949/en-us

  2. Create a Illustrator.exe.manifest file in notepad, paste this text inside, save it, and copy it to the same folder as Illustrator's exe file http://pastebin.com/BZnKwU6a

  3. Create a Photoshop.exe.manifest file in notepad, paste this text inside, save it, and copy it to the same folder as Photoshop's exe file http://pastebin.com/AiZiicT6

  4. Run the applications, no need to restart or anything else, and their interface should now have an acceptable size, but a but blurry as usual with this kind of scaling.

All credit to Rick Rodriguez and the Surface Pro Artist blog.


This was a great solution. I am running Photoshop CS4. I did modify it slightly. I did the following:

  1. Open the Adobe Photoshop folder (Windows C: > Program Files (x86) > Adobe > Adobe Photoshop CS4)
  2. Scroll down until you see Photoshop.exe. Right click.
  3. Select Properties and then the Compatibility tab.
  4. Check the box next to: Override high DPI scaling behavior.
  5. From the dropdown below I selected System.

That was it. It worked great and was simple, without a registry hack.


I have a 4k monitor as well and this has been driving me insane! The only program that I seem to really have an issue with is PS.

There is an option (Windows only) to scale the UI in PS:

screen

I'm on a Mac, so I can't say for sure what it does, but it might help you.

I did a lot of searching on this subject, when I first got this monitor hooked up and I'm pretty sure that it's a PS bug. As one commenter stated, I've seen lots of complaints, but no solutions.