Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
68,862
39,828


The Photos app was redesigned in iOS 18, and in iOS 26, Apple has adjusted some of those original design changes and update the navigation. iOS 26 also includes new 3D image features and a few other useful updates.

iOS-26-Glass-Photos-Feature.jpg

Navigation

In iOS 18, Apple introduced a unified Photos app view that did away with tabs. The Tab bar is back in iOS 26, with buttons to swap between the newly separated Library and Collections sections in the Photos app.

ios-26-photos-app.jpg

Apple also added a separate Search button that's at the bottom of the Photos app, relocating it from the top.

The Library view offers an overview of all the images and screenshots that you've taken, much like the iOS 17 Photos app. There is a larger Select button at the top of the Photos interface, along with a clearly visible button for accessing filters and view options for zooming in, zooming out, and excluding things like screenshots and Shared With You images.

Filters were available in iOS 18, but the button was hidden unless you started scrolling through the Photos Library, which could be confusing. The new layout makes it easier to find all of the different options in the Photos app.

ios-26-collections-photos.jpg

Scrolling in the Library View continues to bring up the options to swap to Years and Months, with buttons for returning to the tab bar or launching a search.

In the Collections tab, you'll see all of the different viewing options that used to be included in the unified view. Recent Days is at the top of the app, along with dedicated views like People and Pets, Pinned, Memories, Trips, Albums, and Featured Photos.

The dedicated view means you can see more of your Collections on one screen. The Media Types and Utilities sections under Collections have larger, more distinct buttons that make it clearer you can swipe or tap to get to more options.

Liquid Glass Design

As with all iOS 26 apps, Photos has a Liquid Glass redesign. It's one of the apps where the Liquid Glass look is the most noticeable.

ios-26-photos-app-interface.jpg

The two-button tab bar uses translucency to show the photos that are behind it, and when it expands into the larger navigation bar that has options for months and years, it remains clear. With the more transparent look, focus is on the photos while buttons fade into the background.

The tab bar, the search button, the select button, and other buttons in the Photos app have the same translucency, and use the more rounded look that Apple adopted this year.

Spatial Scenes

iOS 26 includes a Spatial Scenes feature that adds extra depth and realism to any image. It separates the subject from the background, introducing slight motion when you move your phone back and forth.

spatial-scenes-1.jpg

Spatial Scenes works with all photos, even those that have been in your Photo Library for years.

To use Spatial Scenes in the Photos app, tap into an image and tap on the small hexagon icon on the upper right side of the display. Once enabled, if you move your phone, you will see the depth effect.

Spatial Scenes uses generative AI to add depth to flat images, but it does not require Apple Intelligence. The feature is available on the iPhone 12 and newer.
Collections Customization

There's a more noticeable Reorder button in the Collections section, making easier to see that you can rearrange what you see. You can still grab and drag to reorder, but there is no longer an option to exclude certain types of collections.

ios-26-collections-rearrange.jpg

Collections can be collapsed down until you tap into them, which is a new interface option. When collapsed, you'll only see the name of the collection rather than a thumbnail preview of what it includes.

There's a quick access interface option at the top where you can collapse all collections, show all collections, reorder, or choose a different view.

You can see collections in a view that makes the top collection thumbnails larger than the others, a view with all larger thumbnails, or a view with all smaller thumbnails.

Read More

We have a dedicated iOS 26 roundup that goes into detail on all of the new features that are available in the update.

Article Link: iOS 26 Photos App: Everything That's Changed
 
You can still grab and drag to reorder, but there is no longer an option to exclude certain types of collections.
Collections can be collapsed down until you tap into them, which is a new interface option.

I’m surprised they eliminated the option to exclude certain types of Collections.
The ability to collapse Collections is nice, but there are some I’d still rather exclude just to reduce clutter.
 
I’m surprised they eliminated the option to exclude certain types of Collections.
The ability to collapse Collections is nice, but there are some I’d still rather exclude just to reduce clutter.
I haven’t installed the beta yet, but I hope the Hidden album is still there. Actually, I’d like the ability to hide any album from the library view.
 
  • Like
Reactions: mackiemesser97
Spatial Scenes are incredible. Can't wait for everyone to get to try it.
It is pretty cool! I am not sure how they'd do it and haven't done a lot with it, but maybe if you can't save it, you could make a screen recording of it to share with others. E.g. of grandparents who are no longer around with cousins.


Edit: I gave the screen recording a try and it looks cool to send to people.
 
Last edited:
With Apple’s fairly recent purchase of Pixelmator, I would’ve thought we would see more innovative editing features in the Photos App.

Regrettably at this stage, they’re seemingly fiddling with the interface and not really offering too much else.
 
  • Like
Reactions: unregbaron
Their motto when they redesigned the Photos app in iOS 18 seemed to be: “If it’s not broken, let’s break it.”

Hopefully this time they have undone some of the damage.
The iOS 18 redesign was indeed horrible. I truly hate what was once a nice app. What were they thinking killing the bottom tab bar.

They invented that iconic bottom row with 5 functions. There was even a time where you could customize it. Most apps followed this design, with good reason.
 
With Apple’s fairly recent purchase of Pixelmator, I would’ve thought we would see more innovative editing features in the Photos App.

Regrettably at this stage, they’re seemingly fiddling with the interface and not really offering too much else.
At least they’re taking their time to integrate the company, teams and products into Apple. They could have done like what MS does: hastily integrate a part of it, kill off the originals and call it a day.
 
  • Like
Reactions: KeithBN
Changes to Photos is why I still haven’t updated to 18… hopefully 26 cleans up the mess.
What iOS or iPadOS version are you still running?

I have the same thought when iOS 18 was announced during WWDC 2024 but I have already upgraded from iOS 17.7 to iOS 18.6 since 31st July 2025. I still don't like the iOS 18 Photos app but that comes with the upgrade. The iOS 26 Photos app is what the iOS 18 Photos app should have been.
 
Are these article hero images a deliberate joke? *squints*
Don't know what you're talking about. 😇

It's about the apps themselves, and every time we get to see a new icon with the amazing, magical, wonderful new design.

Editorial team and true Apple fans are raving about the “liquid design” in its most beautiful form.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Diopter
Why does 'Recent Days' have a threshold for showing days ie if you've only taken one photo then that day won't show up. Idiotic
 
  • Like
Reactions: klasma
Hard to believe you still can't tag or add a label in the metadata of a photo in the photos app so help find certain key photos faster. And no I don't want a bunch of albums.
 
  • Like
Reactions: klasma
Spatial scenes are nice. This year too there are some changes but nothing too drastic like last year. Looking forward to trying it out soon.
 
  • Like
Reactions: mganu
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.