Your Photos library is likely full of years’ worth of memories from vacations, gatherings, and events. You might have thousands, if not ten of thousands, of pictures and videos in your feed, and there’s a new iOS feature that will help you remember exactly when and where a particular photo or video was taken—assuming you captured the moment during a live show or game. It’s called “event recognition,” and will ship with iOS 26 when Apple releases it later this month.
Here’s how it works: Photos takes a look at the metadata for your photos and videos, or the information associated with that image, looking for details that may confirm whether it was taken at a major event. The app might use the date, time, location, and other data points to do this, and, once confirmed, it tags the photo or video with the event information. At this time, this feature works for both concerts as well as sporting events.
How Event Recognition in the iOS 26 Photos app works
Let’s say you attended a Death Cab for Cutie concert, like Lifehacker Deputy Editor Joel Cunningham did last month in Brooklyn. When scrolling through these photos and videos in your library, you’ll see a concert ticket icon appear along the bottom of the screen. Tap this, and it’ll pull up the image’s metadata page, complete with a tag labeled “Death Cab for Cutie concert.” If you tap that label, you’ll pull up a page dedicated to details surrounding the event, including the concert’s date, time, location, venue, and even a set list of songs played. In addition to details about the show itself, you’ll also get accompanied content associated with the artist who performed, such as Apple Music playlists and upcoming shows. The event tag might even extend to things you did immediately before or after the show—in Joel’s camera roll, the nearby restaurant he ate at before the Death Cab show is also tagged with a ticket icon.
If your photo was taken during a sporting event instead of a concert, this feature will show you details like the score of the game, the venue, and upcoming events there.
At present, the feature is active for some venues and events but not others (Joel saw no additional information for a 2018 show at a smaller venue, Brooklyn Steel); hopefully it will get more robust with the passage of time.
This isn’t necessarily a groundbreaking new feature, but it’s a fun one, and it makes it easier to remember details from concerts and games you attended long ago. It joins a series of other changes to the Photos app in iOS 26, including new layout changes, fresh filters, and a bottom tab bar.