Find People and Pets in Photos: How Apple Intelligence Organizes Your Memories Discover how your iPhone automatically recognizes people and pets in Photos, making it easier to find, organize, and relive moments — with full control over privacy and accuracy.

Find People and Pets in Photos - A smartphone screen displays a photo search for "Lopa," showing seven images of a black-and-white puppy lying on a carpet. The background is a colorful gradient, highlighting the Find People and Pets in Photos feature.

If you’ve ever scrolled endlessly through your photo library trying to find pictures of a specific person or your pet, Apple has already built the solution into your iPhone. The Photos app uses on-device intelligence to recognize faces and pets, grouping them automatically so you can find moments faster without manually tagging every image.

This feature works quietly in the background. As you take more photos, your iPhone learns who appears frequently in your life — family members, close friends, and even your dog or cat — and organizes those images into dedicated collections. Everything happens directly on your device, designed to balance convenience with privacy.

How People and Pets Recognition Works

Apple Photos analyzes images using machine learning that runs on your iPhone. It looks for facial features, patterns, and recurring visual traits to group photos that appear to show the same person or pet. Unlike cloud-based systems, this processing happens locally, which means Apple doesn’t upload or scan your photos on remote servers for this purpose.

Over time, recognition improves as your library grows. The system becomes better at identifying people across different lighting conditions, angles, ages, and hairstyles. Pets are treated similarly, using visual markers like fur patterns, shape, and size to group images.

To find people and pets albums:

Photos > Albums > People & Pets

Inside this section, you’ll see circles representing individuals and animals the Photos app has identified. Tapping one opens a curated collection of images associated with that person or pet.

If you don’t see the People & Pets section immediately, it may take time for your device to index your library, especially after a new setup or large import.

A smartphone displays a photo of a tabby cat with editing options open, including "Find People and Pets in Photos," “All Photos,” “Make Key Photo,” and more. The Apple logo appears at the bottom right.
Image Credit: Apple Inc.

Naming People and Pets

Assigning names helps refine accuracy and makes search faster.

Photos > Albums > People & Pets > Select a face or pet > Add Name

Once named, that person or pet becomes searchable across the Photos app. Typing their name into search instantly brings up related photos and videos.

You can also confirm or reject suggestions when Photos asks if two albums show the same person. This feedback improves recognition over time.

Correcting Mistakes

No system is perfect. Sometimes Photos may group images incorrectly or miss certain photos.

To adjust manually:

Photos > Albums > People & Pets > Select person > Select > Choose photos to remove

If a person is missing photos, you can add them:

Open a photo > Tap Info (i) > Assign to a person

For pets, similar options apply. Correcting mistakes helps the system learn more accurately without requiring constant maintenance.

Searching by People and Pets

Once names are assigned, searching becomes effortless.

Photos > Search > Type a name or pet name

You can combine searches too. For example, searching “Sarah beach” or “dog park” surfaces moments that include both a subject and a location or activity.

This is especially helpful for creating albums, sharing memories, or finding photos for projects quickly.

Three smartphones showcase the Photos App interface on iOS 18. The first displays a grid of photos labeled "Photos, 8,324 items". The second highlights "Recent Days" and "People & Pets", while the third screen emphasizes a Favorites section with two people posing with flowers, illustrating robust image management.
Photos App | Image Credit: Apple Inc.

Privacy and Control

One of the most important aspects of this feature is how it respects privacy. Recognition data stays on your device. Apple doesn’t share identity labels across accounts, and the system doesn’t expose this information to third-party apps.

If you prefer to disable people recognition entirely:

Settings > Photos > People & Pets > Turn Off

This stops new recognition and removes existing groupings without deleting photos.

This feature becomes increasingly useful as your library grows. Parents often rely on it to track how children change over time. Pet owners find it invaluable for organizing years of photos without effort. It also simplifies sharing albums with family members or creating photo books and slideshows.

For professionals and creatives, People & Pets recognition saves time when sorting large image collections. Instead of manually tagging, you can locate specific subjects instantly.

Making Memories Easier to Find

Photos are more than files; they’re records of relationships, routines, and life stages. By organizing people and pets automatically, Apple Photos removes friction from revisiting those moments. You spend less time searching and more time remembering.

As Apple Intelligence continues evolving, features like this show how technology can work quietly in the background, supporting daily life without demanding attention or compromising privacy.

 

Banner ad showing a smiling man in a café, text promoting business visibility and customer engagement, with app icons and a blue “Start Your Free Listing” button, offer limited to the first 100 subscriptions.

Jack
About the Author

Jack is a journalist at AppleMagazine, covering technology, digital culture, and the fast changing relationship between people and platforms. With a background in digital media, his work focuses on how emerging technologies shape everyday life, from AI and streaming to social media and consumer tech.