Editing a Live Photo on iPhone is handled in the Photos app, allowing you to change the key photo, trim the motion, mute audio, or add creative effects like Loop and Long Exposure.
The half-second before and after your shutter press often holds a better expression than the frame you selected. A Live Photo captures that 1.5-second window, and the editing tools inside the Photos app let you salvage it, polish it, or turn it into something entirely different. No third-party apps or subscriptions are required—the complete editing suite is built into iOS.
What Is a Live Photo on iPhone?
A Live Photo combines a still image with a short video clip, recording 1.5 seconds of motion before and after you take the shot. You can play it back by pressing and holding the photo on your iPhone. While the format preserves movement and sound, some sharing methods convert it to a static image. Sending a Live Photo via Mail sends only the still frame, while sharing through Messages keeps the motion intact for the recipient.
The Core Editing Workflow
All Live Photo adjustments live inside the standard photo editing interface. Open the Photos app, tap the Live Photo you want to edit, then tap Edit in the top-right corner. Tap the Live Photo icon—the concentric circles at the bottom of the screen—to reveal the dedicated editing controls. From here you can change the key photo, trim the clip, mute the audio, or apply visual effects. Tap Done to save your changes.
Changing the Key Photo
The key photo is the frame that appears in your library as the thumbnail. Inside the Live Photo editor, drag the white slider along the frame viewer to scrub through the motion. When you land on the frame you want, tap Make Key Photo. The thumbnail updates instantly to reflect the new selection.
One important catch: if you took the Live Photo on an iPhone 15 model or later with the Portrait effect enabled, changing the key photo removes the Portrait depth effect. The photo remains a standard Live Photo, but the background blur is lost.
Adding Loop, Bounce, and Long Exposure Effects
Apple offers four built-in Live Photo effects that change how the motion plays. Swipe up on the edit screen or tap the effect carousel at the bottom to select one. Apple’s official editing guide details the full list:
| Effect | What It Does | Best Used For |
|---|---|---|
| Live | Default playback — 1.5 seconds of motion on press-and-hold | Standard everyday shots |
| Loop | Repeats the action continuously in a seamless loop | Cheers, pouring liquids, spinning objects |
| Bounce | Plays the action forward then backward | Swings, jumping shots, repetitive motion |
| Long Exposure | Blurs motion across the full clip to simulate a slow shutter | Waterfalls, traffic trails, moving crowds |
| Live Off | Converts the Live Photo to a standard still image using the current key photo | Freeing up storage or sharing to incompatible platforms |
| Portrait | Combines the Live effect with depth-of-field blur (iPhone 15 or later) | Subject-focused shots with background separation |
| Portrait Off | Turns off the depth effect while keeping the Live Photo motion | When you want the motion but not the blur |
You can switch between effects freely without re-recording the clip. Tap Live in the effects list to return to the original unmodified playback.
Saving a Live Photo as a Video
To share your Live Photo as a standard video file, open the photo, tap the More button (the circle with three dots in the top-right corner), and tap Save as Video. The video is saved to your library as a separate file, leaving the original Live Photo untouched. This is the only built-in method for exporting the motion without compression quirks.
Common Editing Mistakes to Avoid
First-time editors often tap Edit and look for Live Photo controls in the general adjustment panel. The tools are hidden behind the dedicated Live Photo icon inside the editor—tap it first before you try to trim or change effects. Another frequent error is forgetting to tap Done after selecting a new key photo; the change is not permanent until you confirm it.
If you mute the audio inside the Live editor, the sound is removed from the motion clip but the original audio is not recoverable after saving, so mute only when you are certain the sound is undesirable. Finally, expecting Mail to preserve the motion will leave the recipient with a static image—use Messages or AirDrop instead.
| Task | Action | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Change key photo | Move white slider, tap Make Key Photo, tap Done | Thumbnail and still frame update to the selected frame |
| Trim the clip | Drag either end of the frame viewer | Playback range is shortened to the selected window |
| Mute audio | Tap the audio/speaker icon at the top of the Live editor | Motion plays without sound; toggle again to restore |
| Save as video | Tap More > Save as Video | A new .mov file appears in the library |
| Turn into still photo | Tap Live effect, choose Live Off, tap Done | Live Photo is converted to a static image of the key photo |
Whether you need to shift the key photo to a better expression, silence a gust of wind, or turn a fireworks burst into a continuous loop, the tools live under the Edit button’s Live tab. The Photos app gives you full control over the clip without forcing you into a separate video editor, and effects like Long Exposure can salvage motion blur that would otherwise ruin a still frame.
References & Sources
- Apple Support. “Edit Live Photos on iPhone” Official workflow for key photo, trim, effects, and saving as video.
- Apple Support. “Take and edit Live Photos” Broader context on capturing and playing Live Photos.
