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Introducing Assisted Culling (Early Access) in Lightroom Desktop
For providing feedback for Lightroom Classic, click here.
We’re excited to share an early look at Assisted Culling, an AI-powered workflow that helps photographers quickly review large photo sets and select the best shots with confidence.
What is Assisted Culling?
Assisted Culling is one of the most requested features from advanced photographers, consistently topping feedback at customer events. It streamlines the process of identifying top photo selects from large sets—hundreds or even thousands—based on attributes like eye openness, sharpness, and more.
Assisted Culling saves photographers countless hours of manual review, letting them focus on creativity instead of sorting.
Why Early Access?
Assisted Culling launches as Early Access at MAX 2025 with a narrow, high-confidence scope prioritizing portraits and headshots. This focused approach ensures reliability for these scenarios while we gather feedback and iterate. From here, we’ll expand to broader use cases like weddings and events before GA.
How to Try It:
FAQs
Giving Feedback:
Please share your experience in this thread. Include:
Your feedback helps us refine our models and user experience.
Lisa Ngo / Kwamina Arthur – Product Managers, Lightroom
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Thank you very much for this feature.
I'd like to be able to easily navigate groupedstack made by AI culling and decide whether or not to keep that stack. As of now it seems that culling stack is separated by normal stacks.
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I've been using the new Assisted Culling feature for real estate photography, and I can confidently say it's one of the best additions to my workflow. It's incredibly helpful for managing groups of photos efficiently.
One feature that would make it even better for me is the ability to automatically create HDR stacks. This would streamline my process even further and ensure the highest quality results.
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Agree! That would be a huge time-saver.
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As someone just learning photoshop with a learning disability, may I say you just saved me so much time and energy with this feature. I beg you, never take it away!
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Very cool feature. Would love to ability to exclude photos I already have added a title or keywords to.
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The feature is great but Lightroom can be quite slow when it is culling.
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This feature is greate, but there are room to improve.
The tried to compare the reject vs accept with just subject focuse set to 80 here is the result.
By eye, I clearly see that the reject one is look sharper that meant it is better focus.
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Thanks for the new Assisted Culling feature in Lightroom 9.0. Very helpful. For Stacking, it would be helpful to be able to see the images from a specific stack in an isolated and much larger Square Grid rather than in Detail view, where the images are smaller and less manageable. It would also be helpful to be able to create Substacks from Stacks with many images. (MacBook Pro OS 26.1, Lightroom 9.0).
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You need to have the ability to move rejected shots to the keep folder, that way I can just delete all rejected shots rather than having to manually do it if there are a few rejected ones I want to keep.
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MacBook Pro OS 26.1 and Adobe Lightoom 9.0:
I attempted my first cull last night and learned the hard way that you need to begin the Assisted Culling process in a specific album instead of going to "All Photos" and either 1) selecting the new photos you want it to analyze or, better yet, 2) having it analyze images from one of the "Recently Added" buckets.
Despite my selecting specific images in "All Photos," the Assisted Culling tool analyzed my entire library. Worse yet, there's no Cancel button to abort — or at least I couldn't find one.
Beginning in "All Photos" was my error, even though the Assisted Culling option is listed in the "All Photos" view. (The tutorial set me straight on this, but it seems this tool shouldn't be actionable in the "All Photos" mode without a pop-up window asking if you really want to analyze your whole library.)
Perhaps from a programming standpoint, I can understand the need to begin the culling process in a specific album. But practically speaking, why make an album of photos you haven't yet reviewed? Being able to select new images from "All Photos" or one of the "Recently Added" folders would be a huge help. I have since used the Assisted Culling and Auto-Stacking tools on established albums and they worked well overall. The tools certainly help to take the anxiety out of photo reviews by grouping the similar images into manageable stacks.
One other area for improvement: Once you've reviewed the culls and put them in stacks, you can't review the stacked images in a traditional "Square Grid." You need to look at them in the "Detail" view, which provides one large image plus thumbnails of the other images in the sliding grid below, and even then it takes two clicks to get there. (See screen shots.) Using the "Detail" view is not a big deal if the stack contains a few photos, but it's deinitely a challenge if the stack contains anything more the five or six images.
One other limitation: You can't see the stacks in Lightroom Mobile. That's been an ongoing issue with merged HDR images, too, so it would be great if Adobe could find a way to address that.
Conceptually, I love these new tools — thank you, Adobe! — and look forward to making them part of my workflow once developers move past the Early Access phase.
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