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Rikk Flohr_Photography
Community Manager
June 11, 2026
Question

Assisted Culling Feedback Thread (LrC)

  • June 11, 2026
  • 6 replies
  • 156 views

Assisted Culling is now generally available in Lightroom Classic

TL; DR: Assisted Culling has graduated from Early Access to General Availability. It gives you a fast, reviewable first pass on large shoots: it surfaces your strongest frames and sets aside the obvious rejects, so you spend less time comparing near-duplicates. You stay in control: review everything, adjust the thresholds, and override any call. If you tried it back in October 2025, it's substantially more accurate now, especially for wedding, event, group, and portrait work. We'd love for you to give it another look and tell us what you think in this thread. 

 

What it does 

Open an album or collection, run a cull, and Assisted Culling analyzes your images against the criteria you choose: Subject Sharpness, Eye Sharpness, Eyes Open, exposure, and more. It marks Selects and Rejects, shows you why behind every call, and leaves the final decision to you. 

How far it's come since Early Access 

  • February 2026: Expanded from individual portraits to multi-person scenes: weddings, events, and group photos. Better eye detection in dense scenes, cleaner separation when people are close together, and fewer false "eyes closed" results.  

  • April 2026: Much-improved handling of shallow depth-of-field, so shots with intentional background blur are kept rather than rejected as out-of-focus. Retrained reject detection that can flag an image under multiple reasons at once (Exposure Issues with a sensitivity slider, Documents, Misfires). Scores no longer recalculate when you switch preview sizes. 

  • June 2026 (GA) 

  • Faces: per-face Eye Sharpness and Eyes Open scores for group and multi-person shots. Click on any face to see exactly how it was scored. 

  • More reliable Eyes Open results in larger groups. 

  • A clearer review of workflow and in-product guidance, so the assistive, reviewable nature is obvious from the first run. 

Getting started 

Open an album, then choose Assisted Culling › Cull. Full walkthrough here.

  

FAQs 

Q: Where is Assisted Culling available? 

A: Lightroom Desktop and Lightroom Classic. 

 

Q: Does the AI decide for me? 

A: No. Assisted Culling makes a first pass that you review. You can adjust how strict each criterion is and override any Select or Reject at any time. Nothing is final until you say so. 

 

Q: What happens to my Rejects? Are they deleted? 

A: No. Rejects are simply grouped for your review and stay in your album. You decide whether to keep, label, move, or delete them. Nothing is removed unless you choose to. 

 

Q: What kind of photos work best today? 

A: Individual portraits and multi-person scenes: weddings, events, and group photos. 

 

Q: Can I keep working while Assisted Culling runs? 

A: Yes. While Assisted Culling analyzes your images, you can review, rate, and edit them as usual. Analysis stops if you turn off the culling filters or switch to a different album or source. 

 

Q: Does Assisted Culling re-analyze the same photos every time I run it? 

A: No. Once an image has been analyzed, its scores are cached and reused in future culling sessions. If you edit an image, its scores are recalculated the next time you run Assisted Culling on it. 

 

Q: Can I adjust how strict the culling is? 

A: Yes. Each criterion can be toggled on or off, and Subject Sharpness, Eye Sharpness, and Exposure Issues include sensitivity sliders for finer control. 

 

Q: Does it work for wildlife, sports, or landscapes? 

A: Assisted Culling is currently tuned for people-focused photography: portraits, weddings, events, and groups. You can run it on other types of photos, but results may be less reliable for now. 

 

Q: Do I need to pay extra? 

A: No. Assisted Culling is included in your existing Lightroom subscription. 

  

Feedback 

This is the place for it. We read every reply. When you post, please include: 

  • App version and platform 

  • System details 

  • Example images (optional, but they help a lot) 

Kwamina Arthur, Product Manager, Lightroom 

 

    6 replies

    Participating Frequently
    June 23, 2026

    To be completely honest, AI-assisted culling is nearly useless for events with the way that Lightroom Classic currently classifies the "subject" of a photo.

     

    In my experience, the ‘subject’ as identified by LrC is anything that vaguely resembles a person in the image (unless there are no people). This includes the actual subject of the image, aka the person or people who are in focus, but also anyone else in the frame at various depths.

     

    For example, if you have a photo of an audience and are focusing on one person, then use a “Select Subject” mask, the mask includes the subject (person in focus) and the several other out-of-focus individuals because, I’m assuming, the coding behind Lightroom is programmed to say “people = subject,” without any nuance to calculate “well, maybe only the person/people that are in focus are the subject; and not those other folks.”

     

    My point being is that it seems like AI-assisted culling is using the same “Select Subject” logic to dish out culling scores, and flat out rejecting images because it bundles the true subject with out-of-focus/distant people in the background (who are not the subject); lowering the culling score into reject territory.

     

    It’s just a faulty foundation in my opinion, and though I’m sure it works for family photos at weddings and similar scenarios, I can’t imagine it can get through an entire day’s worth of event photos without creating more problems than it solves.

     

    I say this as someone who would love for this feature to actually save me time and I appreciate the effort! Unfortunately, in its current iteration, it is not a tool I’m able to find value in.

    Patrick_F_SSGrille
    Participating Frequently
    June 23, 2026

    Thanks ​@Joe U  

    I used to do some large corporate events, most was just “documentation” and giving guests better shots than they could get with their phones. It has been about 12 years since I had to shoot couples going into dinner, like around 400 couples, there were three shooter usually. Never did color corrections or anything, just looking for eyes open, and which shot makes “the dress” look better. Usually two or three options taken. In the film days we would print overnight and put them out the next morning, tossing the “bad” ones in the trash.

    When we went digital we got the process down to under an hour. As shooting started I would grab cards, and start pulling the good ones, and start printing on two Kodak photo printers we would drag along with us. 4-6 seconds per print. Then bring those up to the ballroom, put them out on custom display stands, swap cards, and repeat. Usually the whole process from first shot to last print was about an hour. So as guests were leaving dinner they could just grab them and go. Now I think they have just swapped to just hosting them digitally, bet with the face recognition it could probably just pick you out of the 400 or so couples. 

    So I was hoping that the “culling” process might have been able to do that first stage, find only the ones where eyes are open, heads are facing forward, and if all the shots of that couple met those criteria, either pick the “better” one, or show me all of them so I can decide. The ones where only one shot passed the criteria, just send that to be printed. 

    What frustrated me was there was no simple “Turn Off” option right there under “Culling.” I was out shooting along a Bike Rail Trail over the weekend. Brought all the RAW into LrC, and manually selected the shots I wanted in the collection. 99 shots coming in, easy enough. Then I started color correcting, and cropping, and noticed that the 99 went down to 78 or so, and all the shots I had worked on, a bunch disappeared. Hmmm. Reimported the 99 again, they were there, then I noticed the “culling” process activating, and blink back down to 78 again. 

    I suppose it was working “as intended” as it dropped mainly the duplicates of what I shot. I little wider in this one, slight shift left on this one, change the focal point in this one, so there were a lot of duplicates there, but that is because I have no idea what the web designers want, and need to give them options. You start placing text or maps over the top of an image you may want it to be blurry on the “other side” of the page. 

    So after an hour of looking up how to shut it off, I think I finally have it stopped. I hope it does not come on again unless I want it on again. I think Adobe needs to be better at adding in the “improvements.”  Yes the pop up of “What’s New” when they come down is great, but maybe put in a switch on each new thing, to enable or disable it. If I were under the pressure of turning these shots around that day, I would have tossed LrC in the trash for good. The interface keeps getting worse at each update.

    AI has been a great add on, but only when I ASK it to run. So Adobe, any new AI features, don’t just enable them. Keep them off until I want to use them. Sure prompt me when I am selecting photos, “Do you want AI to cull these for you?” With the show this again switch at the bottom. Just don’t assume we all want it, all the time. You know what they say when you assume.  

    Patrick_F_SSGrille
    Participating Frequently
    June 22, 2026

    How do I shut this off? I do not need any “AI Assisting me” to make the decisions of what images I want to keep. If I go back to Event Shooting yes, it would be great. It keeps dumping all the slight variations that I have purposely shot.

    wilhelm medetz
    Participating Frequently
    June 22, 2026

    Problem still occurs with LrC 15.4.1

    peter-foto
    Participant
    June 21, 2026

    Lightroom Classic Version: 15.4
    Camera Raw Version: 18.4
    Platform: macOS (Apple Silicon, MacBook Pro M1 Max)

    Issue:
    I accidentally started AI Assisted Image Selection on my entire catalog containing 262,118 photos.

    After starting the analysis, Lightroom began analyzing the complete catalog. CPU usage increased to between 200% and 400% and remains at that level continuously.

    The problem is that I can no longer stop the analysis process.

    Observed behavior:

    • The Activity panel shows:
      • Assisted Image Selection: Paused
      • Duplicate Detection: Paused
      • Face Detection: Paused
      • Address Lookup: Paused
    • All options in the Assisted Image Selection panel are disabled.
    • The panel currently shows 0 selected and 0 rejected photos.
    • Batch Actions is disabled (greyed out).
    • Nevertheless, Lightroom still displays “Photos are being analyzed”.
    • CPU usage remains between 200% and 400%.

    Troubleshooting already performed:

    • Quit and restarted Lightroom Classic.
    • Restarted macOS.
    • Disabled Wi-Fi completely and restarted Lightroom.
    • Verified with Activity Monitor that CPU usage immediately rises again after launching Lightroom, even with no network connection.
    • CPU usage drops to zero when Lightroom is closed.
    • CPU usage returns immediately when Lightroom is reopened.

    Expected behavior:
    There should be a way to completely cancel or remove queued AI analysis tasks. Once all analysis options are disabled and all processes show “Paused”, Lightroom should stop background processing and release CPU resources.

    Catalog size:
    262,118 photos.

    Additional note:
    For large professional catalogs, accidental activation of AI analysis can result in many days of continuous CPU activity. Users need a reliable method to fully stop or cancel the process.

    wilhelm medetz
    Participating Frequently
    June 20, 2026

    My LrC 15.3 catalog (approx. 75000 photos, wherof 30000 photos are virtual copies) was completely indexed for Assisted Culling.

    After updating to 15.4 LrC started to rebuild the index.

    After maybe 2 hours (indexing about 3000 photos) an additional 100GB ofvirtual memory (the system has 64GB memory) are used up and the system becomes unusable. It then requires to reboot the system, otherwise starting LrC takes about half an hour, but even then the catalog selection dialog is non-responsive.

    I could reproduce this behavor at least 4 times.

    When the Assisted Culling indexing process is paused, LrC seems to run normal.

    ====

    Lightroom Classic-Version: 15.4 [ 202606101834-493069d4 ]
    Lizenz: Creative Cloud
    Spracheinstellung: de
    Betriebssystem: Windows 11 - Business Edition
    Version: 11.0.26200
    Anwendungsarchitektur: x64
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    Physischer Speicher in Camera Raw: 685MB / 65280MB (1%)

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    Informationen zum Grafikprozessor: 
    DirectX: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 with Max-Q Design (32.0.16.1047)
    Anfangsstatus: GPU wird standardmäßig für die Bildverarbeitung unterstützt
    Benutzerpräferenz: GPU zum Exportieren aktiviert
    HDR in Bibliothek aktivieren: AUS
    GPU zur Vorschauerstellung: Ein (S3_5)

    Anwendungsordner: C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Lightroom Classic
    Bibliothekspfad: C:\Lightroom\Catalog\Lightroom Catalog.lrcat
    Einstellungen-Ordner: C:\Users\WilhelmMedetz\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Lightroom

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    Inspiring
    June 19, 2026

    Hello,
     

    I’m running Windows 11 with Lightroom Classic 15.4, build 202606101834.

     

    After assisted culling, I change some photos from “Selected” to “Rejected” and vice versa.

    I select (P) the “Selected” photos and apply the “Flagged” filter.

    I select all (Ctrl+A) and then apply Auto Develop (Ctrl+U).

    The culling process restarts the selection from the beginning, and I lose my changes to the selected and rejected photos.

    What am I doing wrong? How can I apply Auto Develop to my culling selection?
    Best regards
    Fabio

    Adobe Employee
    June 22, 2026

    You can create a Quick Collection of the images and then apply the develop settings.

    Currently culling runs on images again if their develop settings are changed