What respondents see: languages on the public form
A language switcher appears automatically — preset to each visitor's browser language.
Last updated July 7, 2026
When your form offers more than one language, respondents get a small language switcher at the top of the form. It's preset intelligently: a visitor whose browser is French sees the French version first — most people never need to touch it.
Their choice is remembered on their device for that form, and the language they answered in is noted on the response (you'll see a small language chip in your inbox) — useful to know which of your audiences actually uses which language.
Everything on the page follows the chosen language: questions, options, hints, validation messages, the submit button and your thank-you page.
Note
Two current limitations, so you're never surprised: forms protected by unlock codes show only the original language after unlock, and the status pages of a paused form (e.g. "opens on …") appear in the form's original language.