How to Fix iPhone 16 Pro Max Camera Focus Issue

I can never get a fully clear picture. Only a small portion of the photo I’m trying to take will be in focus while the rest is blurry. I’ve turned macro lens on and off testing if that’s the issue, but it doesn’t change the problem. It’s been like this since I got it on 9/24.



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iPhone 16 Pro Max, iOS 18

Posted on Oct 5, 2024 8:52 PM

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Question marked as ⚠️ Top-ranking reply

Posted on Nov 13, 2024 1:15 AM

I've had an iPhone 16 Pro for a month or so. Everything with the 5x camera, photo, macro and video is soft focus. This is very disappointing.

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Nov 24, 2024 12:14 PM in response to saviola-ko

Good, because you’ll have the distinction of being the very first community member to actually post a photo or two that’s an example of what they’re describing.


Words are great, but can’t be diagnosed. A photo illustrating the issue may help resolve the issue. Otherwise, the words are pointless. Apple is not here and will never read the words.

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Nov 25, 2024 8:45 AM in response to Jeff Donald

I am having the same problem. I did not take the pic in the portrait mode. Rather it was taken using a regular 1x Fusion Camera f1.4 and 24mm lens. And yet, it focused more on the person close to the cam while blurring out the background. Shifted from 15pro to 16pro to have a better canera. Yet it turned out to be a worse choice.

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Nov 30, 2024 10:32 AM in response to jesci272

Please share an example or two of images you’re dissatisfied with. I find it interesting that the few people complaining haven’t shared a single photo illustrating the issue.


Some users are using 3rd party apps that have not been updated to work properly with the new cameras in iPhone 16 and 16 Pro models. Are you using a third party app?

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Dec 8, 2024 7:07 AM in response to shahsamad

It is normal for objects in front of the subject (point of focus) to be OoF (Out of Focus) and objects behind the subject to be OoF. That is the very definition of Depth of Field (DOF).


iPhone gives the photographer to adjust DoF just like a camera/lens with an adjustable aperture. This is one of the benefits of computational photography or AI. Apple Camera app gives photographers control of DoF before the image is taken. Some third party apps allow DoF to be adjusted when editing the image.

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Dec 9, 2024 11:48 AM in response to Jeff Donald

I am out taking pix on a boat of surfers in sunlight. No tripod.


This photo says: 24mm f1.78.


iso64 48mm 0ev. 1/6024s


All camera settings - format- high efficiency, photo mode 24mp, pro raw on, pro raw max check, pro raw format first one checked,


video capture- on.. pro res hdr.


fusion camera- 28mm on. 35mm on. Default lens 24mm.


I am mostly a scenic and people pic taker. Occasionally action like surfers.


thanks!

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Dec 9, 2024 3:00 PM in response to WasAppleTillToday

It’s OK, but what I don’t think you’re realizing is Apple switched the macro lens from the 1X to the .5X.


The macro setting on smart phones are not true macro lenses by any stretch of the imagination. They are slightly modified to focus closer than the other lenses. Your (fusion) camera lowers the resolution to 12 megapixels or 24 mp. Your other cameras were shooting 48 Mp.


We can debate why Apple changed things, but that’s pointless. What’s done is done and photographers will need to adapt. If you look at the center crop I posted, it’s sharp and probably a little larger than life size.


I hand held my images, but they’d have been sharper if I used a tripod.

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Dec 9, 2024 4:56 PM in response to Jeff Donald

Probably about 30 centimeters, just basically after it switches from macro lens to main lens(fusion lens), as that basically takes in the whole photo as I have been doing for years and need to show proof for work, etc. all i know is when i do that on the iPhone 16 its blurry when you zoom into the corners, never had this issue with previous iPhones.

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Dec 9, 2024 5:53 PM in response to WasAppleTillToday

Mine too 24mm. I’m going to look closer at these in the morning. But my initial thought is your lens isn’t sharp as it should be. I >think< your lens might be defective. It’s just not focusing correctly or it’s maybe misaligned. I get up in about 7 hours, but I’ll look again in the morning.

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Dec 9, 2024 6:59 PM in response to Jeff Donald

Thanks Jeff, have a sus even at the previous posts with my crops I have posted, unfortunately because the limit is 5MB on this forum there is no way to send the photos in full quality, etc. but all my crop comparisons are the full quality photos next to each other of all my 4 phones and then cropped and shrunk so i can upload, BUT the difference is obvious anyways. And I want to just reiterate this is not a once off bad shot, this is consistently bad on the iP16 with the main / fusion camera at 1x ONLY (NO issues with the macro, the 0.5x, the 2x they are great and crisp). For example if i take the photo with the 2x zoom I will be at ~40cm off the table and that's got no issues, very sharp, crisp, as it should be, but with the 1x zoom it is the same as always, blurry.


The interesting thing i found out tho, when i take a photo with the macro, 0.5 or 2x zoom, it actually takes the photo in 12MP and only the 1x zoom takes it at 24MP and those are the ones i have an issues with blurriness. All the 12MP ones are good enough for what I need, but it seems like the main / fusion lens is bad for close up photos and blurs out at the edges.


Maybe it is a defective lens, but i guess that's why we are all here, we need to figure it out if it is a major issue across all phones or just the few and see what Apple will do about it.


Maybe what you can try is get a clear, crisp and sharp brochure / menu / A4 paper with text on it, preferably black text on white paper and take a photo with the main lens at 1x (and not using any third party app) and see if you have the same issue, it only has to be A4 size and make sure its not a macro shot or wide, just the simple 1x main lens / fusion camera.


This is what everyone is complaining about in this forum, the issue is with the 1x main / fusion camera, because most of us aren't photographers, we just want to whip out our phones from our pockets and take a good non blurry photo with the 1x zoom like we ALWAYS have, and for it not to be blurry, like it always has been with previous generation iPhones. I know you mentioned that IOS18.2 is coming out soon so I will have to wait and see if that changes anything. But so far I have found that the 1x zoom on the main lens is bad for close up photos.

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Dec 10, 2024 1:00 PM in response to WasAppleTillToday

I’ve noticed several settings that will affect the quality of JPEGs. Do you have ProRaw and Resolution Control enabled? If so, what are the settings?


If you don’t have it enabled, I’m inclined to believe you have issues with the 1X, 24mm lens. If the macro symbol is activating, the camera automatically switches to 13mm. However, this can be adjusted in settings too, under Macro Control.

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Dec 11, 2024 8:26 AM in response to shahsamad

People want more and more advanced features and capabilities. Is it a majority, nearly all, I have no way of knowing. Apple introduced many new features with iPhone 16 and people need to learn how those new features will affect many aspects of their photography.


I understand what Auto is for and a segment of users wanting everything to be like their last camera. But that has rarely, if ever, happened with successive iPhone models. Just look how the images changed in the 4 images another member posted. Each one was different.


No one will get to the bottom of this if examples aren’t shared with the EXIF data. Why? I need to know what the shutter speed is and ISO is because both have a direct impact on image quality. Everyone wants better looking images, why won’t anyone help by sharing the information needed to obtain better pictures.


The bottom line is, if you expect the latest and greatest iPhone model to deliver better quality images, change will have to happen. Those that truly want better image quality will learn and adapt to changing technology. Those that don’t want to learn and improve will be frustrated, as evidenced here.


If you want your images to look like an iPhone 13 Pro Max, then buy three or four and use them for a decade or more. That’s the real solution for I want this model to look like that old model. The way we did it in the old days was shoot film. It looked the same until Kodak changed the emulsion.


Happy to continue to help, the next step is a standardized test so we’re comparing apples to apples.



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How to Fix iPhone 16 Pro Max Camera Focus Issue

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