What You Need
You don't need any special equipment. Any iPhone with a working camera (iPhone 6 or newer) has more than enough resolution for a passport photo. Here's your checklist:
Your iPhone
Any model. The rear camera gives best quality, but the front camera works fine too.
A plain light-coloured wall
No patterns, posters, or shelves behind you. Light grey or cream walls work — the AI can adjust the exact shade.
Natural light
Face a window during daytime. This is the single biggest factor for a good passport photo.
iPhone Camera Settings
Open the Camera app and check these settings before you shoot:
Do
- • Use Photo mode (the default)
- • Use 1x zoom (no zoom)
- • Use the rear camera if possible
- • Turn on the 3-second timer for self-shots
- • Set to highest quality in Settings
Don't
- • No Portrait mode — background blur causes rejection
- • No flash — creates uneven lighting and red-eye
- • No filters — turn off all Photographic Styles
- • No zoom — digital zoom reduces quality
- • No HDR if possible — can over-process skin tones
Portrait Mode Is the #1 iPhone Mistake
Portrait mode artificially blurs the background. Passport photos require the background to be in sharp focus and clearly uniform. This is the most common reason iPhone passport photos get rejected.
Setting Up Your Shot
Lighting
Good lighting is the most important factor. The goal is even, shadow-free illumination across your face:
- Face a window — natural daylight from the front is ideal. Cloudy days actually work better than direct sunlight (softer, more even light).
- Avoid overhead lights only — ceiling lights create shadows under your eyes, nose, and chin. If you must use artificial light, combine it with a window.
- No light behind you — having a window behind you creates a silhouette effect. The light source should always be in front of you.
- Check for colour cast — coloured walls nearby can reflect onto your face. A warm yellow wall can make your skin look yellowish.
Background
Stand about 30-50cm (1-2 feet) away from the wall. This distance prevents your shadow from appearing on the wall and keeps the background evenly lit.
Don't worry about the background colour
If you use EasyPassportPhoto, the AI will replace your background with the correct compliant colour automatically. Just make sure the wall is plain (no patterns) and evenly lit.
Positioning
- Camera at eye level — prop your iPhone on a shelf or stack of books, or ask someone to hold it. Avoid holding it high and looking up, or low and looking down.
- Arm's length distance — if taking a selfie, hold the phone at full arm's length. Closer shots cause lens distortion that makes your nose look larger.
- Centre your face — leave space above your head and show your shoulders. Don't crop too tight.
- Square to camera — face the camera directly, not at an angle. Both ears should be equally visible.
Taking the Photo: Step by Step
Position yourself
Stand in front of your plain wall, facing the window. Remove glasses unless you need them for medical reasons.
Set the timer
Open Camera app > tap the timer icon (top/bottom of screen) > select 3 seconds. This gives you time to get into position after tapping the shutter.
Frame the shot
Position the phone so your head and shoulders fill the middle of the frame. Leave space above your head — the AI will crop to the exact passport dimensions later.
Check your expression
Neutral expression, mouth closed, eyes open and looking directly at the camera. No smiling.
Take the shot
Tap the shutter button (or use the volume button). Stay still for the 3-second countdown. Take 2-3 photos so you have options.
Review immediately
Check the photo: Is your face well-lit? Both eyes clearly visible? No shadows? Face centred? If anything looks off, retake it — it's free.
5 Most Common iPhone Passport Photo Mistakes
Using Portrait mode
Fix: Switch to standard Photo mode. The blurred background will get your photo rejected.
Taking a selfie too close
Fix: Hold the phone at full arm's length, or better yet, prop it up and use the timer. Close selfies cause facial distortion.
Overhead-only lighting
Fix: Face a window for even, natural light. Ceiling lights create dark shadows under your eyes and nose.
Shadow on the wall behind you
Fix: Step 30-50cm away from the wall. This prevents your body from casting a shadow on the background.
Wrong aspect ratio or cropping
Fix: Don't try to crop the photo yourself to 45mm x 35mm. Take a normal photo with space around your head and let the processing handle the exact dimensions.
Got your iPhone photo? Make it compliant in 60 seconds.
Upload your selfie and our AI will fix the background, adjust lighting, crop to exact 45mm x 35mm dimensions, and verify GOV.UK compliance. £9.99, money-back guarantee.
No app download needed • Works in your browser • Money-back guarantee
Making Your iPhone Photo GOV.UK Compliant
A raw iPhone photo isn't a passport photo yet. It needs to meet specific GOV.UK requirements for size, background, and composition. You have two options:
Option 1: Use EasyPassportPhoto (recommended)
Upload your iPhone photo to EasyPassportPhoto.com. The AI handles everything:
- Background replacement — automatically replaces whatever background you have with the correct compliant background
- Lighting correction — evens out shadows and adjusts exposure
- Precise cropping — crops to exactly 45mm x 35mm with your face correctly positioned
- Compliance check — verifies the photo meets all GOV.UK requirements before you pay
- Photo code — generates the digital code needed for online passport applications
Cost: £9.99. 100% money-back guarantee if your photo is rejected.
Option 2: DIY processing
You can try to edit the photo yourself, but be warned — this is where most people go wrong:
- You need to crop to exactly 45mm x 35mm with the face positioned correctly (29-34mm from chin to crown)
- The background must be perfectly uniform with no shadows
- The photo must be saved at exactly 600x750 pixels for online submission
- File size must be between 50KB and 10MB, in JPEG format
Frequently Asked Questions
Official Sources
This guide is based on official UK government guidance for passport photo requirements: