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Home » Apple quietly removes Night Mode Portraits on iPhone 17 Pro, leaving users puzzled
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Apple quietly removes Night Mode Portraits on iPhone 17 Pro, leaving users puzzled

By technologistmag.com6 December 20253 Mins Read
Apple quietly removes Night Mode Portraits on iPhone 17 Pro, leaving users puzzled
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Apple quietly removes Night Mode Portraits on iPhone 17 Pro, leaving users puzzled

A feature that we’ve taken for granted since 2020 – the ability to shoot Portrait Mode photos using Night Mode – has quietly vanished from the latest Pro models. Users started noticing something was wrong and flagged it on Reddit and Apple’s forums. Now, Apple has officially confirmed via a support document that Night Mode Portraits are indeed gone on the iPhone 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max.

What Happened

Portrait Mode changed the game when it arrived, but the iPhone 12 Pro really levelled it up. Thanks to the LiDAR scanner, it let us take those creamy, blurred-background shots even in terrible lighting by mixing Night Mode’s long exposure with Portrait depth mapping. Every Pro model from the 12 to the 16 could do this.

But with the iPhone 17 Pro, that combo is dead. If you try to switch to Portrait Mode in the dark, the Night Mode icon just disappears. The phone won’t even save the depth data needed to add the blur later. Side-by-side tests confirm it: an older iPhone on the same software can still do it, but the brand-new 17 Pro Max cannot. It turns out this isn’t a bug; it’s a deliberate removal.

Why It Matters & Why You Should Care

For a lot of us, Night Mode Portraits weren’t just a gimmick – they were the only way to get good photos of friends at a dim bar, a concert, or a holiday dinner. Removing it fundamentally changes how you use the camera in low light.

So, why kill it? Apple hasn’t said, but we can make some educated guesses:

  • Motion blur: Night Mode requires a long exposure. If people move even slightly, the portrait gets ruined.
  • Noise and grain: Mixing the heavy processing of Night Mode with artificial bokeh often resulted in “soft” or grainy images.
  • Resolution drop: Night Mode Portraits are stuck at 12MP, whereas the 17 Pro wants to shoot regular portraits at a much sharper 24MP.

Apple likely decided the quality trade-off wasn’t up to their standards anymore. However, silently deleting a feature people rely on – especially for those upgrading specifically for the camera – is incredibly frustrating.

iPhone 17 Pro

What’s Next

Apple hasn’t hinted at bringing it back, though it’s reversed bad decisions before when users complained loudly enough.

For now, if you own an iPhone 17 Pro, you are stuck with a choice: you can have a bright photo (Night Mode) or you can have a blurry background (Portrait). You can no longer have both. Until Apple addresses this or patches it back in, you’ll just have to adjust how you shoot when the lights go down.

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