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Known Participant
November 5, 2025
Answered

Is there a way to recover a photo after "Delete from Disk"?

  • November 5, 2025
  • 2 replies
  • 554 views

I keep seeing information online in various sources, including Adobe, about recovering deleted photos such as the info here:

 

https://helpx.adobe.com/lightroom-cc/using/restore-deleted-photos.html#view_deleted_photos

 

It starts by telling the user to "Select Photos" but I have no idea where that is 🙂

 

I tend to think of user error to begin with and assume there is something I'm missing.

 

The above Adobe page doesn't seem to indicate, but can someone help clarify if the ability to actually recover deleted photos applies to photos after "Delete from Disk" vs "Remove from Lightroom"?

 

If so, how?

 

Thanks.

Correct answer Conrad_C

This question is posted in the Lightroom Classic community, but the Adobe help link there is for cloud Lightroom which works differently. Because cloud Lightroom stores images on cloud servers, it’s possible to hold “deleted” images (images marked as deleted) on those servers for 30 days before they’re actually permanently deleted. That’s how cloud Lightroom can have a “Deleted” album. But even in cloud Lightroom, after it’s permanently deleted, that’s it, it’s gone forever.

 

The directions in that link don’t apply to Lightroom Classic, where file availability doesn’t depend on the cloud at all because Lightroom Classic stores originals locally, on your computer. With Lightroom Classic, if a file itself is actually deleted from the OS file system (Delete from Disk), not just removed from that one catalog (Remove from Lightroom), including emptying the Trash (Mac) or Recycle Bin (Windows),  then there is nothing Lightroom Classic can do to bring it back because the OS itself has deleted the file.

 

That means the deleted file has to be restored at the OS level. Your post is labeled macOS, so, if the volume storing your photos is backed up using any Mac backup software, such as Apple Time Machine, the way to get back that photo is to restore it from any backup that it’s on, such as the last backup before the file was deleted.

 

You could then import the restored photo back into the catalog. However, it would be starting over; it wouldn’t have the edits, metadata, history, etc. that it had before, because Lightroom Classic deleted that from the catalog at the same time Lightroom Classic asked the OS to delete the file. If it’s important to restore that metadata, that could be possible from a backup of the catalog.

2 replies

Conrad_C
Community Expert
Conrad_CCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
November 5, 2025

This question is posted in the Lightroom Classic community, but the Adobe help link there is for cloud Lightroom which works differently. Because cloud Lightroom stores images on cloud servers, it’s possible to hold “deleted” images (images marked as deleted) on those servers for 30 days before they’re actually permanently deleted. That’s how cloud Lightroom can have a “Deleted” album. But even in cloud Lightroom, after it’s permanently deleted, that’s it, it’s gone forever.

 

The directions in that link don’t apply to Lightroom Classic, where file availability doesn’t depend on the cloud at all because Lightroom Classic stores originals locally, on your computer. With Lightroom Classic, if a file itself is actually deleted from the OS file system (Delete from Disk), not just removed from that one catalog (Remove from Lightroom), including emptying the Trash (Mac) or Recycle Bin (Windows),  then there is nothing Lightroom Classic can do to bring it back because the OS itself has deleted the file.

 

That means the deleted file has to be restored at the OS level. Your post is labeled macOS, so, if the volume storing your photos is backed up using any Mac backup software, such as Apple Time Machine, the way to get back that photo is to restore it from any backup that it’s on, such as the last backup before the file was deleted.

 

You could then import the restored photo back into the catalog. However, it would be starting over; it wouldn’t have the edits, metadata, history, etc. that it had before, because Lightroom Classic deleted that from the catalog at the same time Lightroom Classic asked the OS to delete the file. If it’s important to restore that metadata, that could be possible from a backup of the catalog.

jmorg65Author
Known Participant
November 5, 2025

Conrad, the intro paragraph at the link I provided specifically states "Photos deleted and synced from Lightroom Classic can be accessed in the same place."

 

I think that language would lead most readers to believe that the processes described on the page should, indeed, apply to Lightroom Classic, in addition to the exclusively web-based versions.

Rob_Cullen
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 5, 2025

@jmorg65 Can I join the conversation?  The important part of that link statement you provided is "and synced from Lightroom-Classic". ie. for images you are seeing in Lightroom-Desktop, Lightroom-Mobile, or Lightroom-Web, that you have placed in a Lr-Classic collection that sync to the Lr Cloud.

That link is a 'Lightroom-ecosystem' page, not applicable to Lightroom-Classic at all, but I do agree- could be very confusing- and I had to read it several times!.

 

Here is a link more appropriate for Lightroom-Classic:

https://jkost.com/blog/2024/06/removing-and-deleting-photographs-in-lightroom-classic.html

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 15.3, Photoshop 27.5, ACR 18.3, Lightroom 9.3, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 16.0.3 .
DdeGannes
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 5, 2025

I you have selected "Delete from disk" check in the Trash/ Bin. If they have been deleted there you will fave to recover from a back up source.

 

Regards, Denis: iMac 27” mid-2015, macOS 11.7.10 Big Sur; 2TB SSD, 24 GB Ram, GPU 2 GB; LrC 12.5,; Lr 6.5, PS 24.7,; ACR 15.5,; (also Laptop Win 11, ver 24H2, LrC 15.3; PS 27.0; ) Camera Oly OM-D E-M1.
jmorg65Author
Known Participant
November 5, 2025

Thanks.