🥝GuideKiwi
Free Guide

Learn How to Recover Recently Deleted Photos

Understanding How Photo Deletion Works on Your Device When you delete a photo from your phone, computer, or tablet, the file doesn't actually vanish right aw...

GuideKiwi Editorial Team·

Understanding How Photo Deletion Works on Your Device

When you delete a photo from your phone, computer, or tablet, the file doesn't actually vanish right away. Instead, your device marks that space as available for new data to overwrite it. This distinction is crucial because it means recovery is often possible if you act within a certain timeframe.

On smartphones running iOS or Android, deleted photos typically move to a "Recently Deleted" or "Trash" folder first. Apple devices keep photos in this folder for 30 days before permanent deletion. Android devices vary by manufacturer and photo app—some keep deleted photos for 30 days, while others may delete them immediately. Google Photos, if you use it, stores deleted items in Trash for 60 days.

On computers, the mechanics differ slightly. Windows moves deleted files to the Recycle Bin, which can hold deleted photos until you manually empty it or until the storage fills up. Mac computers send deleted files to the Trash, where they remain until you empty the Trash folder. External hard drives and SD cards don't always have a trash function, meaning files deleted from these devices may be immediately marked for overwriting.

The speed at which your device overwrites deleted space matters significantly. A device that's actively saving new photos, videos, or files will overwrite deleted data faster than a device in light use. If you delete a photo and then continue using your device heavily, recovery becomes increasingly difficult because new data fills those marked spaces.

Practical Takeaway: Check your device's trash or recently deleted folder first—recovery from there is straightforward and doesn't require special tools. Stop using your device immediately after realizing important photos are missing to prevent new data from overwriting the deleted files.

Recovering Photos from Built-In Trash and Recently Deleted Folders

The easiest recovery method involves using folders that exist on your device by default. Most modern devices automatically route deleted photos to a temporary storage area before permanent deletion, and restoring from this location takes just a few taps or clicks.

On iPhone and iPad, open the Photos app and look for the "Albums" tab at the bottom. Scroll down until you find "Recently Deleted." This folder displays all photos and videos deleted within the last 30 days. Select the photos you want to recover by tapping "Select" in the upper right corner, then choose "Recover." The photos return to your main library and Camera Roll.

Android users should open Google Photos (if installed) or their device's native gallery app. The location of the trash folder varies—in Google Photos, tap your profile picture, select "Photos settings," then "Trash." Photos deleted through Google Photos remain here for 60 days. On Samsung devices, open the Gallery app, tap the menu icon (three lines), and select "Trash" to view and restore deleted photos. Other Android manufacturers may organize this differently, so checking your specific phone's documentation helps.

Windows PC users can locate the Recycle Bin on the desktop or taskbar. Double-click to open it and browse recently deleted files. Right-click the photo you want to recover and select "Restore." The file returns to its original location. On Mac computers, click the Finder icon in the dock, then look for "Trash" in the dock's right side. Click it to open, find your photos, and drag them back to your desired folder, or right-click and select "Put Back."

For external drives and SD cards connected to computers, check whether your file manager shows a trash folder. Some storage devices don't have native trash functionality—deleted files from these devices require different recovery methods discussed in later sections.

Practical Takeaway: Check your device's trash or recently deleted folder within 30-60 days of deletion for the highest recovery success rate. This method works without downloading anything and takes less than one minute.

Using File Recovery Software for Permanently Deleted Photos

When photos are no longer visible in trash folders or when 30-60 days have passed, specialized recovery software may still locate them. These programs scan your device's storage for file signatures—unique patterns that identify photos even after the trash folder has been emptied.

Recovery software works by reading your device's storage sector by sector, looking for data that matches photo file formats like JPG, PNG, RAW, and HEIC. The software doesn't need to find the complete file intact—modern recovery tools can reconstruct photos from fragmented data. Success rates depend on how much new data has been written to your device since deletion and the quality of the recovery software.

Popular recovery options include EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard, Recuva by Piriform, and DiskDigger. EaseUS is available for Windows, Mac, and Android, with a free version that scans your device and shows recoverable files before requiring payment to actually restore them. Recuva specializes in Windows systems and can recover photos from internal drives, external drives, and memory cards. DiskDigger works on Android devices and can recover photos even from devices without rooting.

Using recovery software involves several steps: first, stop using the device or remove the storage device to prevent overwriting. Connect your phone to a computer or insert your SD card into a card reader. Download and install the recovery software on your computer (not the device with deleted photos). Launch the program, select your device as the scan target, choose the file types you want to recover (photos), and start the scan. Once complete, preview recoverable files and select which ones to restore to a new location.

Important limitations exist: recovery software cannot restore photos that have been overwritten by new data. If your device has been in active use for weeks after deletion, the recovery success rate drops significantly. Additionally, some newer devices with encryption or specialized storage formats may not work fully with all recovery software. Free versions often have limitations on file size or number of recoverable items.

Practical Takeaway: Use recovery software when trash folders are empty and deletion occurred within the past few weeks. For best results, avoid using your device between deletion and recovery, and perform recovery on a different computer to avoid overwriting data on the source device.

Recovery Options for Photos Deleted from Cloud Services

Cloud storage services like Google Photos, iCloud, OneDrive, and Amazon Photos add another layer to photo recovery. These services maintain deleted photo backups separately from your device, creating additional opportunities for recovery even when local device recovery isn't possible.

Google Photos users who delete a photo from their Google account have a 60-day window to recover it. Open Google Photos on any web browser, click the trash icon in the left menu, and you'll see all deleted photos from the past 60 days. Select photos you want to recover and click "Restore"—they return to your main library. This works even if you've already emptied your device's local trash folder.

Apple iCloud Photo Library users can access deleted photos through iCloud.com. Sign in to your iCloud account, open Photos, click "Albums" in the sidebar, and scroll down to "Recently Deleted." Photos here can be restored for 30 days after deletion. If you use the Mac Photos app, the Recently Deleted album appears there as well.

Microsoft OneDrive and Amazon Photos follow similar patterns, though their interface layouts differ. In OneDrive, access the Recycle Bin (trash folder in settings), find your deleted photos, and restore them. Amazon Photos includes a "Trash" section in the application where deleted photos remain for 30 days.

A significant advantage of cloud recovery is that it's independent of device activity. Even if you've used your phone constantly since deletion, cloud services still maintain copies of deleted photos on their servers. This makes cloud recovery more reliable than local device recovery in many situations. However, if you permanently deleted photos through the cloud service's interface and waited beyond the recovery window (30-60 days depending on the service), recovery becomes impossible through official channels.

For photos deleted from cloud services more than 60 days ago, contact the cloud service's customer support. Some services have extended recovery options or can manually investigate account history, though this isn't guaranteed to restore files.

Practical Takeaway: Check your cloud service's trash or recently deleted folder first—this often contains photos you thought were permanently gone. Cloud deletion recovery works independently of device usage, making it reliable even weeks after you last used your device.

Prevention Strategies to Avoid Losing Photos in the Future

Understanding how to prevent photo loss reduces the need for recovery in the first place. While accidents happen

🥝

More guides on the way

Browse our full collection of free guides on topics that matter.

Browse All Guides →