Photos won’t import into non-System Libraries on macOS Sequoia

Hello,


I am running macOS Sequoia (15.6.1) and recently noticed a problem with Photos libraries that are not set as the System Photo Library.


I have one iCloud-connected library set as my System Photo Library — imports there work normally.


But I also maintain several secondary (non-iCloud) libraries stored locally and on external drives. These are important to me, as I’ve kept this structure since 2006: I edit photos in Photoshop or Lightroom Classic and then return the edited versions into the correct trip library. Keeping each trip in its own library on a thumb drive makes it simple to bring along and show friends on their computers when I visit.


The issue:


* Any attempt to import into these non-System libraries now fails with the error:
“This item cannot be added to your Photo library because it may be an unrecognizable file format or the file may not contain valid data.”

* This happens regardless of the source:

* AI generated images (title slide)

* Edited files exported from Photoshop/Lightroom

* Even a simple JPG downloaded from Google (e.g. a map photo)


All of these files import fine into the System Library. The problem only happens with secondary/non-System libraries.


Troubleshooting I’ve already tried:

* Exported as new JPG/PNG from Preview (no change)

* Exported as “Unmodified Original” from Photos (no change)

* Tested on both internal APFS volumes and external APFS thumb drives (no change)

* Restarted Mac and Photos app (no change)


This workflow has worked flawlessly for me since decades ago. The change only appeared after upgrading to Sequoia, so it feels like Photos has become much stricter about non-System libraries.


👉 My questions:

* Is anyone else experiencing this same behavior?

* Is this a new limitation by design, or is it a bug introduced in Sequoia?

* Are there any known workarounds?

*

Thank you very much for any guidance. I’d like to keep using my trip libraries without needing to funnel everything through iCloud.



Eddie

iMac 27″, macOS 15.6

Posted on Aug 25, 2025 11:07 AM

Reply
11 replies

Aug 25, 2025 11:22 PM in response to sungyle

Keeping each trip in its own library on a thumb drive


Apple don't regard thumb drives as appropriate for a Photos Library:


And to avoid possible data loss, don't store your library on a removable storage device, such as an SD card or USB flash drive, or on a device shared over your network or the internet, including over a cloud-based storage service.


That's from here:


Move your Photos library to save space on your Mac - Apple Support (SG)


I'm not sure why Apple give this advice, but it may be because they don't regard these items as robust enough for the job. (Interestingly, Adobe don't recommend them for LRC Libraries either). So what may be happening is that there is creeping silent corruption of these libraries and/or Photos is now more robust about checking that the library is in an appropriate location. This has certainly been the case in recent years with Libraries on other forms of inappropriate locations.

Aug 26, 2025 07:33 AM in response to sungyle

sungyle wrote:
👉 My questions:
* Is anyone else experiencing this same behavior?
* Is this a new limitation by design, or is it a bug introduced in Sequoia?
* Are there any known workarounds?

External drives work just fine. I have my System Library on my internal drive, but I have other Library that run on external drives. No problem. There is no limitation due to the OS.


It looks like you know that drives must be formatted in either APFS format or Mac OS Extended (Journaled) format for Photos Libraries to be run on them. As Yer_Man mentions, Flash Drives are slow and unreliable. There are good, fast, small, portable SSDs for less than $80/TB.


Do you have a "non-system" library on your internal drive? Does it work there?


There is something special about your setup. To narrow things down, try these steps:

  • Restart the computer (of course)
  • Re-start in Safe Mode. This bypasses certain potentially disruptive processes, and it often helps. Safe Mode is different for different computers, so see this: 

          Start up your Mac in safe mode - Apple Support 

  • Make a new user and see if the same problem recurs with it. This is a bit harder, because a new user can't access a different user's stuff. You would need to move your Library out of your own user's folder up to the general "Users" folder.
  • Rebuild your Photos Library--close Photos and re-launch by option-command-clicking the app icon. If this is a System Library with iCloud Photos, it’s possible that repair will cause a re-sync that lasts long enough to make you nervous.


The idea is to find out if the problem is with the Library, with your account, or with caches and login items, and stuff like that. One of these steps may fix the problem, but their failure to work also helps figure out what's happening.


Let us know what happens…



Aug 27, 2025 10:18 AM in response to sungyle

Where exactly are the non-system libraries on your internal drives?


Are they in a subfolder of your user home folder, for example in the Pictures folder? Photos does not work with with libraries outside of your home folder. Some folders are problematic.

  • For example, when I put a library in the folder /Users/Shared, I am encountering problems with the file ownership.
  • if your Mac is syncing with iCloud Drive, make sure that the libraries are not in folder syncing with iCloud Drive, for example the Desktop or the Documents folder.


The best place would be your Pictures folder.



Aug 27, 2025 10:58 AM in response to sungyle

Thank you, I have been doing this for decades with no problems. It happens after I updated to Sequoia 15.6.1 (it's been good before 15.6.1.


Two thoughts on that: Apple recommend against these locations to protect against dataloss. We certainly see cases of creeping corruption on here when libraries are stored on inappropriately formatted disks. Often the first symptom is difficulty with importing or exporting.


Or perhaps Apple have added something to the recent version of Photos that allows it to detect that it's on an unsupported device. Again, we know that they have done this in the case of other inappropriate locations.

Sep 6, 2025 08:11 AM in response to laurasdes

Thank you so much for your support. Your message really helped me — I no longer feel so lonely or start doubting myself.

I’ve been working with external hard drives and USB SSDs for years, with many different Photos libraries spread across them. I’ve been doing this for no less than 20 years without any problems at all. And then suddenly, it just stopped working for no reason. I’ve tried everything that people have suggested, but nothing has fixed it.

I really hope that your situation, and mine, will encourage others with the same challenge to speak up, so that Apple will take the time to look into this and fix it. I have a lot of confidence in this forum — my last big issue was that Apple’s Speak function refused to speak Cantonese except inside Pages. That problem went on for almost two years, but finally someone here figured out why and it got fixed. I was so grateful.

So, let’s be patient. This really is a ridiculous situation, but thank you again for reaching out — it makes me feel much less alone.



Sep 6, 2025 08:27 AM in response to sungyle

sungyle wrote: … That problem went on for almost two years, but finally someone here figured out why and it got fixed. I was so grateful.

You need to know that no one here fixed your Speak problem. We are just users like you, and Apple engineers don't read this stuff. If you have a problem like that, you should leave comments for Apple directly, here:

Feedback - Photos - Apple


The other thing is your "non-system library" problem. Yer_Man, léonie, and I don't have this problem, so the proper thing is to find out what is different with your system. I can't see that you ever attempted to answer my questions :

Do you have a "non-system" library on your internal drive? Does it work there?

To narrow things down, try these steps:

• Restart the computer (of course)

• Re-start in Safe Mode. This bypasses certain potentially disruptive processes, and it often helps. Safe Mode is different for different computers, so see this: 

          Start up your Mac in safe mode - Apple Support 

• Make a new user and see if the same problem recurs with it.

• Rebuild your Photos Library--close Photos and re-launch by option-command-clicking the app icon.


It's very hard to help if you don't help us help you.


Photos won’t import into non-System Libraries on macOS Sequoia

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