8 Tips for Shooting Better Travel Photos On Your iPhone

You don’t need a mirrorless or DSLR camera to capture incredible travel moments... just the right setup and a few smart techniques.

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Camera phones are a huge part of the photography conversation for a reason. They’re powerful, easy to use, and almost always with us, which means you are far less likely to miss a moment. You don’t need to carry extra camera bodies or invest in a lot of gear to make strong, beautiful images while you travel. Your iPhone is already an incredibly capable camera, ready to go wherever you are.

In this article, I am sharing some of my favorite tips for taking better travel photos with your iPhone. Many of these examples use the Moment Pro Camera App II, since it gives you more manual control and makes certain tools easier to see and adjust. But the ideas themselves are not limited to that app. Nearly all of these tips also apply when shooting with the native iPhone camera, whether that means changing settings, improving composition, watching your exposure, or simply being more intentional about how you frame a scene.

Before you even open the camera, though, there are a few settings worth adjusting first. People often assume the iPhone camera works best straight out of the box, but taking a few extra steps ahead of time can make a noticeable difference in both how the camera works and how your final images turn out. Let’s start there.

Settings to Optimize the iPhone Camera

Tip #1 - Turn On the Grid

Composition is one of the most important parts of a great photograph, especially when shooting landscapes or street photography.

One of the easiest ways to improve your composition in camera is by turning on the grid. This gives you a visual guide for using the rule of thirds, a classic photography principle that helps create more balanced, interesting images. The rule of thirds works by dividing your frame into nine equal sections with two horizontal lines and two vertical lines. Instead of placing your subject directly in the center, you can position it along those lines or where the lines intersect. This often creates a photo that feels more natural and dynamic to the eye.

In landscapes, the grid can help you place the horizon cleanly across the top or bottom third of the frame instead of splitting the image in half. In street photography, it can help you line up buildings, leading lines, or a single subject in a way that feels more intentional and visually strong.

In the Moment Pro Camera II App, you simply swipe your thumb down on the screen to reveal a panel of settings where you can toggle the grid on and off, plus plenty more settings such as histogram and the horizon level line.

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Native camera settings
Native camera settings
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Moment Pro Camera II settings
Moment Pro Camera II settings
A nicely composed image with background and foreground subjects using the Rule of Thirds.
A nicely composed image with background and foreground subjects using the Rule of Thirds.

Tip #2 - Turn On ProRaw

In the Moment Pro Camera II app, tap the top of the screen and open the third tab to adjust your image quality settings. Then turn ProRAW and Resolution Control on. Depending on which iPhone camera you are using, these settings can give you files up to 48 megapixels, which is a huge advantage when you are traveling.

When you are shooting travel photos, you are often working with tricky light, bright skies, deep shadows, colorful streets, and moments you cannot recreate twice. ProRAW gives you a richer file with more image information, which means you have far more flexibility when you go back to edit. You can recover detail in the highlights, bring back shadow detail, fine-tune color, and crop in without your image falling apart. If you want your travel photos to feel polished but still true to the moment, shooting in ProRAW gives you a much stronger starting point.

We have a whole other article on shooting in ProRAW in case you’d like to learn more:

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How to Shoot and Edit Apple ProRAW Photos for iPhone

A full educational breakdown of what Apple ProRAW means, including how to shoot and edit images, for mobile photographers.

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Robin FerandJan 21, 2026
Settings in the Moment Pro Camera II App and native iPhone camera
Settings in the Moment Pro Camera II App and native iPhone camera
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Tip #3 - OR… Turn On Natural Processing

In the Moment Pro Camera II app, you can either shoot in ProRAW for maximum detail and editing flexibility, or switch to Natural Processing for a more organic, film-like look.

Natural Processing tones down the heavy HDR and over-sharpened look that can make some iPhone photos feel too processed. Instead, it preserves more texture, grain, and softness for an image that feels more natural straight out of camera.

The tradeoff is that Natural Processing currently captures at 12MP, so you are giving up some resolution in exchange for a more authentic rendering. But if you love images with softer edges, more natural tone, and a less artificial finish, it is a beautiful setting to use, especially in good light.

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Tip #4 - Disable Lens Correction

For iPhones, the Lens Correction toggle is turned on by default. When you use the 0.5x ultra-wide camera, this setting is meant to correct edge distortion. But in many cases, it can overcorrect the composition and make your ultra-wide photo look a little less natural. It’s often better to turn it off and make any adjustments later in editing, so you keep the full, untouched look of the original image.

The native 0.5x wide-angle lens on iPhone is great for epic rolling landscapes or cityscapes like New York, where tall buildings do not quite fit within your regular 1x frame.

If you do not love shooting with the 0.5x lens, the Moment 14mm Fisheye Lens is another fun option for an even wider look. Just attach it to the Moment Camera Case on your iPhone, and you are ready to go.

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Tip #5 - Use HEIF Files

Under Formats, switch your photo file format from JPEG to HEIF.

HEIF files are more efficient and can capture 10-bit color, which means better color, improved dynamic range, and higher image quality overall, all while taking up less storage space than standard JPEGs.

In other words, you get a stronger file without filling up your iPhone as quickly.

Settings in the Moment Pro Camera II App and native iPhone camera
Settings in the Moment Pro Camera II App and native iPhone camera
Shot + edited in HEIF formatting
Shot + edited in HEIF formatting
Shot + edited in HEIF formatting
Shot + edited in HEIF formatting

Tip #6 - Utilize 2x Zoom

This iPhone feature has been a game-changer for me. It uses the regular 1x camera, but crops into the 48-megapixel sensor to create a tighter image without switching to a different lens.

That crop gives you a more 50mm-style field of view, with a little extra compression that feels especially flattering for portraits, pets, and detail shots like a beautifully set dinner table. It is one of the easiest ways to get a more polished, intentional look straight from your phone.

If you want to lean even further into that look, try the Moment Tele 58mm mobile lens with a Moment Photo Case for more of a true telephoto feel and added bokeh.

Shot on 1x
Shot on 1x
Shot on 2x
Shot on 2x
Textures / details on 2x
Textures / details on 2x
Textures / details on 2x
Textures / details on 2x
Textures / details on 2x
Textures / details on 2x

Tip #7 - Use the Exposure Slider

In the Moment Pro Camera II app, you can use the histogram at the top of the screen to monitor your exposure and quickly see whether your highlights are getting too bright. If the highlights are pushed too far, you may lose detail in areas you actually want to keep, like bright skies or windows.

I use this all the time when photographing hotels, especially when I need to post quick images to Instagram Stories while I am still on-site. Interior spaces are often much darker than the light coming through the windows, so the iPhone will sometimes overexpose the window area in order to brighten the room.

To avoid that, I usually tap on the window to set my exposure for the brightest part of the scene. This helps preserve the view outside instead of blowing it out completely. Then, later in editing, I bring up the shadows to reveal more detail in the darker interior.

It is a simple trick, but it makes a huge difference when you want to capture both the room and the view outside in a way that feels balanced and true to the space.

Exposure slider in the Moment Pro Camera II App
Exposure slider in the Moment Pro Camera II App
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Tip #8 -Think Of Your Style / Aesthetic BEFORE You Shoot

This tip technically starts before you even open the camera app, but it can make a big difference in how easy and enjoyable it is to shoot while traveling.

If you like your photos to have a certain look but do not want to spend time editing every image later, try conceptualizing a particular aesthetic, like a warmer or moodier tone, before you start shooting.

Using Photographic Styles on iPhone

If you are new to Photographic Styles on iPhone, they are one of the easiest ways to shape the mood of your image before you even press the shutter. On iPhone, they go beyond a simple filter by adjusting tone and color in a more tailored way, which helps your photos feel polished without looking overly edited

I recommend starting with a subtle warm or moody style for travel, then keeping it consistent throughout your trip for a more unified look.

On iPhone, you can open Camera, tap the camera controls, choose Styles, and swipe through the options to preview them before shooting. You can also fine-tune the tone, color, and intensity, so it is worth making small adjustments rather than going too heavy. That way, your photos feel cohesive and polished, but still natural.

Whether you are using the native iPhone camera or a more manual app like Moment Pro Camera II alongside it, this is a great way to create photos that already feel closer to your personal style straight out of camera.

Photographed with a "style" and aesthetic in mind.
Photographed with a "style" and aesthetic in mind.
Photographed with a "style" and aesthetic in mind.
Photographed with a "style" and aesthetic in mind.

BONUS TIP - Use 3rd Party Camera Apps

There are plenty of third-party camera apps that can expand what your iPhone camera can do and make the whole shooting experience feel a lot more intentional.

If it wasn’t obvious already, I really love the Moment Pro Camera II app. It gives me more control over the way I shoot and makes it easier to fine-tune everything from exposure to image quality, so I can shape the final look of my photos with much more care. For travel photography especially, that extra control can make a big difference.

That said, using a third-party app is not a necessity. The native iPhone camera is still incredibly capable, and the core ideas in this article apply no matter what app you are using. Whether you are shooting in Moment Pro Camera II or sticking with the built-in camera, the goal is the same: to take a little more control over how your images look, rather than leaving every decision up to the phone.

With a few small setting changes and a more thoughtful approach while shooting, your iPhone can become a genuinely powerful travel camera, one that is more than capable of capturing your trip beautifully.

Download the app here!
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