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Renaming photos, videos, and documents on iPhone and iPad can be confusing. This guide shows which apps support file name changes, how to use the Files app, and how captions in Photos can help.
Giving your photos, videos, and files meaningful names on your iPhone or iPad makes them easier to organize, quicker to find, and more professional when shared. However, renaming files in iOS and iPadOS does not always work the same way it does on a Mac or Windows PC. Some apps allow you to change the actual file name, while others only let you label or organize items within the app.
Keep reading to learn which iPhone apps support true file renaming and the correct ways to rename photos, videos, and documents on iPhone and iPad.
If you have tried renaming a photo inside the Photos app and found no rename option, your iPhone is working exactly as intended.
Unlike the Files app, photos and videos stored in the Photos app are not treated as regular documents that you can freely edit or rename. Instead, Apple designed the Photos app to function as a media library. Images are organized using metadata such as date, location, people, and visual recognition rather than traditional file names.
Because of this design:
If you need to change the actual file name, you must first save the photo to the Files app, which provides access to the file system.
That said, Apple does offer a workaround inside Photos through captions. Captions act as searchable labels and help you find images quickly without changing the original file name.
Since the Photos app does not allow direct file name changes, you need to move the photo or video to the Files app first and then rename it. Here’s how:


The media will now be saved in the Files app with the new file name.
If you forget to rename the file while saving it, you can rename it later directly inside the Files app. You can also rename attachments received in the Mail app by saving them to the Files app and renaming them there.
You can rename documents, PDFs, images, downloads, and other files directly using the Files app. Apple’s Files app works as the central file manager in iOS and iPadOS, giving you full control over file names and folders.

If the file is stored in iCloud Drive, the updated file name syncs automatically across your devices.
If you are working with documents created in the Pages app, you can rename them directly within the app:

No, you cannot truly rename files directly inside the Photos app on iPhone or iPad. The Photos app functions as a media library rather than a file system.
Within Photos, you can:
The Preview feature on iPhone and iPad allows you to open and edit supported files, but it primarily works as a viewer and markup tool rather than a file manager. You cannot rename media or documents directly in Preview. Its functionality is limited to viewing, annotating, signing, and editing content.
While you cannot rename photos directly in the Photos app, you can add captions to make them easier to find later. Captions act as searchable labels and are indexed by both the Photos app and Spotlight search.
Here’s how to add a caption:
That’s how you rename photos, videos, and files on your iPhone and iPad. The Files app remains the central place for full file name control, while apps like Pages provide limited document management. Apps such as Photos and Preview are designed primarily for viewing and editing rather than file management.
If you have questions about renaming files on your iPhone or have discovered another useful tip, feel free to share your experience in the comments.
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