Stop taking average iPhone photos — change these 3 camera settings right now

Apple iPhone 17 review.
(Image credit: Tom's Guide / John Velasco)

Most people use their iPhone camera on default settings and wonder why their photos look ordinary. The iPhone has powerful camera hardware — it ranks as one of the best camera phones for a reason — but several settings that dramatically improve photo quality are turned off by default or hidden in menus most users never explore.

Three specific settings make the biggest difference: grid lines for better composition, Photographic Styles for professional color and tone, and high-resolution capture that uses your camera’s full potential. Enabling these takes less than two minutes and immediately improves every photo you take afterward.

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1. Turn on grid lines for better composition

Grid lines overlay a 3x3 grid on your camera screen based on the rule of thirds, a fundamental photography composition technique. Instead of centering subjects in the middle of every shot, the grid helps you position them at intersection points where lines cross, creating more dynamic and visually interesting photos.

Open Settings, scroll to Camera, and toggle on Grid. The grid appears every time you open the camera app.

When photographing people, align eyes or faces with the upper intersection points instead of dead center. For landscapes, position the horizon along the top or bottom grid line rather than splitting the frame in half. For architectural shots, use the vertical lines to straighten buildings and avoid tilted angles.

The grid doesn’t appear in final photos, it’s only a guide while shooting. This makes it risk-free to enable permanently. Even if you ignore it sometimes, having the grid available improves composition over time as you naturally start aligning subjects with the guidelines.

2. Enable Photographic Styles

Photographic Styles are Apple's version of filters, but unlike Instagram filters applied after the fact, Styles process images during capture. The iPhone adjusts different parts of the image separately, producing more natural-looking results than a blanket filter.

Open Camera, then tap the six dots icon in the top right corner and Styles. Next, swipe through and select one and it applies to all future photos until you change it.

Rich Contrast deepens shadows and brightens highlights. Vibrant makes colors richer without affecting skin tones. Warm adds golden tones for sunsets and food. Cool adds blue tones for a cleaner look.

Once set, your Style applies to every photo automatically. If you don't like it, just switch back to Standard or try another. No commitment. This is one of the quickest ways to make photos look professionally edited straight from the camera.

3. Change this for maximum detail

The iPhone 14 Pro and later models have 48MP cameras but default to 12MP to save storage space, discarding 75% of the detail your camera can actually capture. To enable full resolution: open Settings, Camera, Formats, and enable ProRAW & Resolution Control.

At 48MP you can crop heavily and still have a sharp image, zoom into fine textures, and print large without losing quality. The difference is most noticeable in landscapes, architecture, and anything with fine detail.

For everyday snapshots, 12MP is perfectly fine. But for travel, events, or anything you might print or crop later, 48MP captures detail you simply can't recover if you didn't shoot at full resolution.

If you don't see these options in Settings, your iPhone has a 12MP camera and is already shooting at its maximum resolution.

Check out more hidden iPhone tips below!


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Kaycee Hill
How-to Editor

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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