Apple’s iOS 27, unveiled at WWDC 2026 on June 8, 2026, leans toward polish over spectacle. But buried in that stability-first update is one Photos feature that genuinely raises an eyebrow: Spatial Reframing, a generative AI tool that lets you virtually reposition the camera after you’ve already taken the picture.
The idea is deceptively simple. You touch and drag to nudge the framing or shift the perspective, and AI generates new content only where the perspective change leaves a gap. In practice, that means you can pivot around a subject, level out a wonky horizon, or recompose an awkward shot without ever picking the camera back up. Despite the “Spatial” branding, Apple says the feature doesn’t lean on depth data the way virtual bokeh does — and crucially, it works on older images and even photos shot on other cameras.
Spatial Reframing arrives alongside two more familiar editing upgrades. The Clean Up tool, which removes unwanted objects, now promises “better quality and more realistic infill” in complex scenes. A new Extend tool does the opposite of a crop: it conjures up a plausible version of whatever sat just outside your original frame, handy for giving a subject breathing room or straightening a shot without recomposing it.
If this all sounds like Photoshop’s greatest hits, that’s because it is. Google and Samsung have spent years stacking up AI photo tricks — dropping the photographer into a group shot, merging frames so everyone’s smiling at once, shuffling objects around the scene. Apple is, by its own pace, playing catch-up.
But there’s a line Apple won’t cross in Photos: you still can’t drop fully AI-generated imagery into a real photograph, something both rivals happily allow. The company frames this as “deep respect for the craft of photography,” wanting tools that “enhance their images in ways that respect the original moment” — an echo of its 2024 stance that photos should be things that “really, actually happened.”
It’s not an absolute principle, though. Minutes earlier in the same presentation, Apple demoed its Image Playground app adding an AI-generated cake into someone’s hands for a birthday invite. So the boundary is editorial, not philosophical.
A few practical caveats apply. Any image touched by these features carries a hidden SynthID watermark flagging it as AI-edited. Some server-side features, including image generation, will face daily usage limits — Apple hasn’t said how strict, which tools are affected, or whether an iCloud+ subscription loosens them.
Elsewhere, the camera app gets a new Siri mode, which risks cluttering an interface Apple completely redesigned last year. Whether it can be switched off remains to be seen in the betas.
Spatial Reframing and friends ship free with iOS 27, expected in mid-September 2026 — the only cost is owning compatible Apple hardware.