Short answer
The Photos app's built-in Edit mode includes Sharpness and Definition sliders (tap Edit, then scroll the adjustment dial at the bottom to find them) that can visibly improve a mildly soft or slightly out-of-focus photo — apply modest increases and tap the photo to compare before/after, since over-sharpening adds visible halos and noise. For more meaningful improvement on mildly blurry images, third-party AI apps (such as Remini or Snapseed) can produce noticeably sharper results by inferring missing edge detail, though outputs are generated estimates rather than true data recovery. No tool — native or third-party — can fully restore a severely blurry or heavily out-of-focus photo; if you shot a Live Photo, check whether another frame in the 3-second sequence is sharper before accepting the blur.
Unblurry helps with this on your iPhone and works on device for privacy — a pay-once app with no subscription. Test it on a real example and check the current App Store listing for details.
What to look for before choosing
- Native fix: Photos > Edit > scroll adjustment dial to Sharpness (increase slightly) and Definition (increases midtone clarity)
- Over-sharpening creates halos and noise — less is more; use the before/after tap to evaluate each step
- Live Photos: tap Edit > swipe the frame slider to find a sharper moment captured in the 1.5-second burst
- Portrait mode photos: the blur may be intentional bokeh — adjust Depth Control slider in Edit to reduce it
- Third-party AI apps help with mild motion blur; no app recovers a severely out-of-focus or grossly motion-blurred photo
A practical decision process
- Native fix: Photos > Edit > scroll adjustment dial to Sharpness (increase slightly) and Definition (increases midtone clarity).
- Over-sharpening creates halos and noise — less is more; use the before/after tap to evaluate each step.
- Live Photos: tap Edit > swipe the frame slider to find a sharper moment captured in the 1.5-second burst.
- Portrait mode photos: the blur may be intentional bokeh — adjust Depth Control slider in Edit to reduce it.
- Third-party AI apps help with mild motion blur; no app recovers a severely out-of-focus or grossly motion-blurred photo.
Quick comparison
| Need | What to check | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing model | Check whether useful features require a subscription, a one-time unlock, or neither. | The cheapest app on day one may not be cheapest after a year. |
| Privacy model | Prefer on-device work when the content is sensitive. | Private documents, resumes, study data, and family content deserve careful handling. |
| Export / lock-in | Confirm file formats, sharing, backup, and deletion controls. | A good app should help you finish the task, not trap your work. |
Where Unblurry fits
Unblurry is a strong fit when you want a focused, private, pay-once tool for this.
Pay oncePrivateOn-device
This page is an independent buying guide. App Store features and prices can change, so confirm details on the listing before purchase.