Apple’s new Camera Remote feature gives AirPods a role that goes beyond audio playback. With the camera app open on iPhone, supported AirPods can now act as a wireless shutter trigger for photos and videos.
For many users, the appeal is immediate. It removes the need to tap the screen, set a 10-second timer, or rush back into position for a selfie or group shot.
What is required
The feature depends on the latest iPhone software, with iOS 26 currently cited as the supported version. Apple also limits Camera Remote to certain AirPods models, which means older versions, including the first-generation AirPods Pro, are not supported.
That hardware limit matters because the feature is not available to every AirPods owner. Users need both a compatible iPhone and a supported set of earbuds before the setting can be used.
How to turn it on
Camera Remote is not enabled by default. After pairing the iPhone and AirPods, users need to open Settings on the iPhone and tap the connected AirPods name.
If the AirPods name does not appear, opening the AirPods case first may make it visible. From there, users can go to the Camera Control section and choose Camera Remote.
The menu offers two gesture options: Press Once and Press and Hold. Those settings determine how the AirPods will trigger the camera while the feature is active.
How it works in practice
Once enabled, Camera Remote only works while the Camera app is open on the iPhone. A photo can be taken, or video recording can be started and stopped, by pressing the AirPods stem or the Digital Crown on AirPods Max.
There is one important condition. At least one AirPods must be in an ear for the camera control to function.
That means AirPods sitting on a desk or held in the hand will not work as a remote. Apple appears to keep the feature tied to active use rather than leaving it available at all times.
The overlooked limitation
The tradeoff comes when the camera function is turned on. While the Camera app is open, AirPods cannot be used to wake Siri or switch listening modes in the usual way.
Apple notes this in Settings: if Press Once is chosen, media control gestures become unavailable, while Press and Hold disables listening mode and Siri gestures.
For users who often shoot selfies, distant photos, or video without a tripod, the feature adds a fast hardware shortcut. But it also changes what the AirPods can do at the same moment, which is the part many users may only notice after turning it on.
