My photos were always crooked until I found this hidden iPhone camera trick
iPhone's hidden camera level displays lines when your phone is tilted, helping you take straight photos
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Hi, I'm Kaycee. Welcome to Hidden iPhone Tips, a weekly column where I dig into the best iOS features Apple doesn't tell you about.
Nothing ruins a good photo faster than realizing it's crooked. You frame the shot carefully, snap the picture, and only notice later that the horizon is tilted or the building leans at an odd angle. By then, it's too late to retake it, and while you can rotate photos afterwards, cropping to straighten them reduces image quality and cuts off parts of the frame.
Your iPhone has a built-in solution hiding in the camera settings that most people never discover.
The level feature displays on-screen indicators that show exactly when your iPhone is perfectly straight. Once enabled, you'll never take another crooked photo by accident. Here's how to turn on iPhone's camera level and why it's genuinely useful.
How to enable camera level on iPhone
Open the Settings app on your iPhone and scroll down until you find Camera. Next, tap Camera to open the camera settings menu. Look for the Level option in the Composition section. Toggle Level on.
Now open your Camera app and point it at any scene. You'll notice crosshairs or lines overlaid on your screen — that move as you tilt your iPhone.
Tilt your phone up, down, left, or right and watch how the lines shift. When the two crosshairs align perfectly and both turn yellow, your iPhone is level. This works both for landscape and portrait orientation.
The level stays active whenever you use the Camera app. It appears in Photo mode, works in Video mode, and even functions in other camera modes. You don't need to toggle it on and off, it's just always there when you need it.
Why this feature is genuinely useful
Once enabled, the level requires zero effort. You're already looking at your screen to frame your shot anyway. Glancing at whether the lines match requires virtually zero mental output but prevents mistakes you'd otherwise only notice later.
It also means less editing afterward. Straightening photos in post always requires cropping, which reduces quality and can cut off parts of the image you wanted to keep. Getting it level while shooting preserves everything.
For something that takes five seconds to enable in settings, the camera level makes every photo you take going forward noticeably better. It's one of those small changes that you appreciate every single time you use your camera.
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Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.
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