What Is Depth Effect Wallpaper? iPhone Guide [iOS 16 to 26]
Quick Specs
| Feature introduced | iOS 16.0 — September 12, 2022 |
| Compatible devices | iPhone XR / XS and later (A12 Bionic+) |
| Minimum iOS | iOS 16.0 |
| Best image format | JPEG or HEIC (PNG does not work) |
| Works on | Lock iScreen only (not Home i screen) |
| Latest evolution | iOS 26 Spatial Scene (iPhone 12+) |
What Is Depth Effect Wallpaper?

Deep effect wallpaper is easily one of the most visually pleasing things Apple has released in recent memory. Launched in your iPhone on September 12, 2022, in iOS 16, it makes your lock iScreen feel genuinely 3D – without animation, without wasting battery and without the need for any special camera. The concept is basic: were your clock just floating separately on top of your wallpaper, it would seem out of place, as if edited atop a photo. Instead, it appears to drift behind the picture’s main object.
It all relies on the powers of Apple’s on-device AI. When you choose an image that is compatible with this feature to be your lock iScreen wall – you get an on-device machine learning segregating the image into multiple layers – all on your device. This AI is snooping your image to create a map of the image that accurately predicts where the points of noise are in the photo. The such points is then identified as foregrounds and backgrounds for the machine learning algorithm to separate. The lock iScreen clock then appears to go behind the main object of your photo as eye – the clock is split into parts, with some bits flashing past the foreground, while some bits are cast towards the background. Remember, although the effect is cinematic and multi-layered, it is entirely static, presents no traffic to your processor and uses no battery in the process.
What does the depth effect do on wallpaper?
The depth effect action creates a fact layer look on your lock i screen. In your iPhone, this on-device AI will distinguish your lock iScreen wallpaper between an above foreground and a different layer of the photo and by doing this the lock iScreen clock appears to pass behind the items of your face, making it look like the clock appears to be across in your frame. The result is an incredible effect that looks 3D with no additional battery consumption and animation. It is worth pointing out that this feature if only applicable to your Lock iScreen wallpaper and your home iScreen wallpaper remains a flat image, irrespective of the fact that you may have populated the photo with a depth map. Many beginner users are often confused as described above leading to the most frequently asked in forums that ‘I have set a depth effect related content but the interface of my home iScreen still looks odd’.
Also interesting to note, is that the depth effect feature is not a moment photo or a clip. It is a still picture, an image, that has been created by the AI with the depth map as it is a still image. None of notification banners, incoming calls or if you use the Dynamic Island will be affected by the image. Check out the next table to see which iPhone is compatible with this feature. This amazing feature if explored over the monitoring period will have no impact on the day to day battery life and has been empirically proven to exist as such since its release by Apple.
Which iPhones and iOS Versions Support Depth Effect Wallpaper?

Depth effect wallpaper requires two things to work: iOS 16 or later, and an iPhone with Apple’s A12 Bionic chip or newer. That chip was introduced in the iPhone XR and iPhone XS back in 2018, so most iPhones people are using today qualify. The table below spells out compatibility clearly.
| Device | Chip | Depth Effect (iOS 16+) |
|---|---|---|
| iPhone 16 series | A18 / A18 Pro | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone 15 series | A16 / A17 Pro | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone 14 series | A15 | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone 13 series | A15 | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone 12 series | A14 | ✓ Full support + iOS 26 Spatial Scene |
| iPhone SE 3rd gen (2022) | A15 | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone 11 series | A13 | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone SE 2nd gen (2020) | A13 | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone XS, XS Max, XR | A12 | ✓ Full support |
| iPhone X, 8, 8 Plus | A11 | ✗ Custom photos not supported |
| iPhone 7 and earlier | A10 or older | ✗ Cannot run iOS 16 |
📐 Engineering Note
Depth effect will only work if the processor of your iPhone can handle the depth map data in real time. This is a Neural Engine feature which first debuted in the A12 Bionic (2018). If you have an iPhone X, 8, or 8 Plus — all of which can support iOS 16 — depth effect will only work on Apple’s included default wallpapers, not any images you’ve saved in Camera Roll. This is the single biggest user confusion point for customers who have upgraded and can no longer get depth to work on older devices.
How to Enable Depth Effect on Your iPhone Lock i screen

Adding the depth effect only takes about two minutes. These instructions work with all versions of iOS from 16 to 26 (the flow is basically the same across all the versions). Make sure to delete any Lock iScreen widgets (they interfere with depth here), and pick a JPEG or HEIC photo — PNGs won’t trigger the toggle without warning.
- Open Settings on your iPhone and tap Wallpaper.
- Select Add New Wallpaper to begin a new lock i screen.
- Click Photos, then select a photo from Camera Roll. Portrait mode shots work well here, or any image with a defined subject and contrasting background.
- Place your fingers together in a pinch gesture, then drag outward to crop the picture. Make sure the focal point (main subject) is directly underneath the clock portion of the lock iScreen — the depth algorithm needs this overlap to blend the layers properly.
- Click Add in the upper right corner, then again on Customize when prompted about lock iScreen style.
- Tap the (three-dot menu) at the bottom right corner of the wallpaper thumbnail.
- Switch the Depth Effect toggle on. If it’s greyed out, that means your image isn’t compatible. Try another portrait image or download a depth effect wallpaper package for i screen.
- Select Done, then touch Set as Wallpaper Pair (for both lock and home screens) or Set as Lock iScreen only.
💡 Pro Tip
The toggle for Depth effect to only appear if the photo contains a clearly detected foreground object. If it doesn’t show up, try editing the image to move the main subject more into the area shown by the clock. Sometimes just dragging the picture slightly higher will trigger detection and cause the toggle to appear.
How to get depth effect on any wallpaper?
Not all images produce the depth effect – which is often a shock to many. This isn’t a filter you slap on any image. Your photography has to have a recognisable foreground subject—think animals, people, flowers, or any other object with distinct outlines—that the iOS can distinguish from the background.
Portrait shots trigger the effect most consistently because the camera actually records depth map data with the shot itself. Standard photos can also succeed, as iOS employs artificial intelligence to infer depth even without a physical depth map, but they’re less reliable. When a portrait shot is selected and displayed as your lock iScreen wallpaper, select the three-dot menu and swipe Depth Effect to on.
If this switch is greyed out, your photo doesn’t contain enough depth map information to generate the depth effect. Easy fix: opt for a wallpaper that supports depth capturing in i screen’s collection of wallpapers—every single one of them successfully triggers the depth toggle.
Depth Effect Wallpaper Not Working? 5 Fixes That Actually Help

If the depth effect switch is flickering, absent, or just isn’t working, it’s almost definitely one of the following five reasons. Run through them in order – the first two sort out most of the causes.
Why can’t I use the depth effect on iPhone wallpaper?
Two main reasons. First, your device may not support it — depth effect requires an iPhone with an A12 Bionic chip (iPhone XR, XS, or newer). Note that the iPhone X, 8, and 8 Plus can run iOS 16 but lack the Neural Engine required for depth processing on custom photos. Second, your image may not contain the depth information needed — screenshots, PNG graphics, and heavily edited photos typically contain no depth data, leaving the toggle permanently greyed out.
Fix 1 — Remove lock iScreen widgets
The least obvious and most forgotten reason. Depth Effect and Lock iScreen widgets are mutually exclusive. Turning on in-depth effect will turn off the option for lock iScreen widgets and vice versa.
Go into Settings Wallpaper Customization of the lock iScreen tap on any widget you want to remove. With all widgets removed, the Depth Effect option should come back on.
Fix 2—Chop your picture jik-jik PNG to JPEG O HEIC
PNG images are the silent killer of depth effect. iOS only renders depth in JPEGs and HEIC images – images saved as PNGs are rendered as flat graphics, with no depth layer anywhere, and the toggle will never be visible. If you downloaded a wallpaper as a PNG, import it into the Photos app and set it as your wallpaper, or if you already have it as a file, use the Files app shortcut: open the image file, hit Share Save to Files then tap on the arrow in the bottom right to Send, Shortcuts, then Convert Image by Quick Actions, then save your converted file. Re-set the image as your wallpaper.
Fix 3 — Check your device compatibility
Depth effect is unavailable for custom wallpaper photos for all models older than XR & XS, regardless of iOS version (must be iOS 16+). The above table shows all supported models. Users who have iPhone X, 8 or 8 plus need to use Apple’s native depth effect wallpapers, or update their hardware.
None of the options of fixing4 really worked. I could not select any better image or turned my images so it still shows the act of the person being at the right place.
Two image issues prevent the depth effect from triggering:(1) the actual photograph doesn’t contain an obvious foreground subject (a flat landscape, a graphic with text, a screenshot) – none of these provide iOS with enough information to generate a depth effect; or(2) the subject positions so that it overlaps the entire clock zone. iOS requires a partial overlap – the subject should protrude through the clock zone, not bury it. Try repositioning by “two-finger dragging” the image upward so the subject intersects the clock from below.
Solution 5 – Restart your iPhone and turn depth effect off and on
Infrequently, an iOS artifact prevents the depth effect from displaying even if everything else checks out. First, restart your iPhone to clear the graphics pipeline. After restarting: Go to Settings Wallpaper Customize tap the three-dot menu disable depth effect (the toggle), Save, then re-enable the toggle and Save.
⚠️ Common Mistake
Using a screenshot as a wallpaper is the single largest cause of depth effect failure. Screenshots are PNG images with no depth data – the toggle will never appear when choosing these. Stick with a quality original photo taken from your camera roll (JPEG or HEIC) or pre-designed depth effect collection.
Depth Effect vs. Parallax vs. Live Wallpaper — What’s the Difference?

Three technology stories, three distinct visual journeys. Many people confuse depth effect with parallax, assuming the two names are interchangeable. The concepts are related but not synonymous. Here’s how each method works, and which one should be on your lock i screen.
i screen’s 3-Type Wallpaper Selector
| Feature | Depth Effect | Parallax | Live Wallpaper |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visual effect | Clock behind foreground subject (3D layer) | Wallpaper shifts with phone tilt | Animated loop or video |
| Image type | Portrait or depth-aware JPEG/HEIC | Any photo or graphic | Video, Live Photo, motion file |
| Battery impact | Minimal (static rendering) | Minimal (static + gyroscope) | Moderate (continuous) |
| Available since | iOS 16 (2022) | iOS 7 (2013) | iOS 8 (2014, limited) |
| Minimum device | iPhone XR / XS (A12 Bionic) | Any iPhone | Any iPhone |
| Screens | Lock iScreen only | Lock + Home i screen | Lock + Home i screen |
Decision Framework — pick the right effect:
Because it uses AI layer separation for an elegant 3D look with zero battery cost.
Because the gyroscope-driven tilt effect works with any image and both iScreen types.
Because continuous motion delivers maximum visual impact — at the cost of moderate battery drain.
The Best Depth Effect Wallpaper Styles — What Actually Looks Great

Depth effect is not equally forgiving of all image types. After testing dozens of images, the iScreen editorial team identified five (5) themes that always produce striking results.
Portrait photos of people and pets
The benchmark. Portrait mode provides iOS with the most detailed data – crisp ‘subject’ foreground against a blurry background provides near-instant depth-to-composition. The subject’s silhouette within the forehead area creates a distinct peeking-glance clock aesthetic. Eyes of animals with defined outlines use the same effect.
Nature macro shots — flowers, leaves, branches
A lone bloom or branch of leaves somehow stretching across the clock zone results in a stunningly natural depth effect. The trick is shooting up-close so the background becomes a flat field of color – the more defined foreground-versus-background contrast, the stronger the depth effect. iScreen records consistently favor cherry blossoms and tropical leaf imagery.
Architecture — arches, columns, doorways
Structural frames (stone archways, colonnaded hallways, great portals) provide a natural depth reference that the algorithm interprets accurately. Everything in the foreground frames the clock from both left and right, and the distant view (sky, interior, courtyard) exaggerates the depth effect. Solid-colored tones and high-contrast stone textures work best.
Silhouette shots against sky or sunset
A crisp, clean foreground silhouette against a gradient sky gives iOS the most accurate foreground edge possible. Mountain peaks, lone trees, city skylines anything a clean, crisp outline against a light background. The high-contrast edge will be straightforward to extract into the depth map, and the effect on the lock iScreen will be unmistakably bold and bold.
Curated depth effect wallpapers from i screen
The surest way to guarantee the depth toggle is invoked is to use a wallpaper designed explicitly for the feature. Every picture in the depth effect collection of iScreen has been tested and verified to trigger the depth toggle including 4K resolution options and iOS 26 Spatial Scene-compatible images. No file conversions, no trial-and-error.
🧪 The Layer-Aware Wallpaper Test
An original iScreen template- score your image prior to establishing it as wallpaper
Q1: Does the picture have a vibrant foreground subject (person, animal, object, branch)?
Q2: Was it taken in Portrait mode, or does it have a remarkable subject-to-background separation?
Q3: Does the foreground subject have organic edgesnot a smooth graphic, logo, or screenshot?
3 / 3
Perfect candidate
1–2 / 3
Test first
0 / 3
Avoid — will look flat
i screen for iPhone
Find Your Perfect Depth Effect Wallpaper
All wallpapers in iScreen’s library have been tested for depth effect capability and are compatible with iOS 26. Search through thousands of 4K designs – Landscape, nature, landmarks, and geometric styles.
iOS 26 Depth Effect Wallpaper — What’s Changed

Depth effect has advanced considerably since its start in iOS 16. Each subsequent iOS version has improved the feature, and iOS 26 brought the most prominent innovation so far by rechristening and redesigning the experience as “Spatial Scene” for newer equipment and keeping classic depth effect available for all A12 Bionic+ devices.
iOS 16 — September 2022
Depth Effect supported. The clock everts behind the foreground target of compatible Portrait images. Available on iPhone XR / XS and later with iOS 16.
iOS 17 — September 2023
Stability updates and extended image support. Additional non-Portrait photos begin to trigger the depth toggle, thanks to Apple’s increasing AI layer-sensing algorithm.
iOS 18 — September 2024
Speedier edge detection and got HEIC clarification support in addition to JPEG. Crisper foreground contours and more stable depth output on detailed subjects such as hair and plants.
iOS 26 — 2025–2026
Giant change. Apple released Spatial Scene (also called 3D Photo Wallpaper) – an improved successor to classic depth effect requiring iPhone 12 or later. Spatial Scene adds:
- Liquid Glass blending – the lock iScreen user interface components (clock, widgets) now use Apple’s new translucent Liquid Glass material that varies its shade to the wallpaper colours
- Flexible clock script – the clock script expands and moves to improve layer overlapping
- 4K support – wallpapers baseload at full 4K resolution on ProMotion screens
- Facilitated edge detection – critical subject separation, including fine details such as hair and fur
- Dedicated Spatial Scene filter – a new filter located in the wallpaper chooser (Settings Wallpaper Add New Wallpaper Spatial Scene) helps data shows easily
🔄 What this means for you
If you own an iPhone 12 or newer, updating to iOS 26 unlocks Spatial Scene — a noticeably more polished version of the depth experience with Liquid Glass UI. If you own an iPhone XR, XS, or SE 2nd gen, classic depth effect continues to work exactly as it did in iOS 16 — the Spatial Scene tab simply won’t appear for those models. iOS 26 home iScreen themes by i screen are already optimised for the Spatial Scene aesthetic.
FAQ — Depth Effect Wallpaper
What does the depth effect do on wallpaper?
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The depth effect produces a multi-layer phenomenon on your iPhone lock i screen. On-device AI is used to identify your wallpaper and divide it into a foreground subject, and a background layer. The lock iScreen clock appears to travel behind the foreground subject – making it seem as though the clock is embedded within the photos, rather than floating on top of it. This creates a stunning 3D-like effect, without using any animation or consuming battery power.
How to get depth effect on any wallpaper?
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Not every picture supports depth effect. Your wallpaper needs to include a clear foreground subject – that is, a person, pet, or object – which the iPhone AI is able to distinguish from the background. Portrait mode images generally produce the most reliable result. Once you have chosen your compatible image as your lock iScreen wallpaper, tap the three-dot menu () and enable Depth Effect. If this switch is grayed out, it means the photo does not contain sufficient depth data – switch to a Portrait photo, or download a depth-aware wallpaper by i screen.
What are common issues with depth wallpaper?
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The most common error is using a lock screen widget – depth effect and lock screen widgets cannot be used at the same time, the user must choose one. Other, more minor, setbacks include working with a PNG file (convert to JPEG or HEIC), an unsupported device without an A12 Bionic chip, or a picture where the subject extends over too much of the clock triggering the layer separating algorithm.
Why can’t I set a depth effect wallpaper?
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Two main reasons. First, your device may not support it: depth effect requires an iPhone XR, XS, or newer — any model with Apple’s A12 Bionic chip. Note that iPhone X, iPhone 8, and iPhone 8 Plus can run iOS 16 but do not have an A12 Bionic, so depth effect will not work on custom photos on those devices. Second, your image may lack depth information — screenshots, PNG graphics, and heavily cropped photos typically contain no depth data. Remove any lock screen widgets, use a JPEG or HEIC portrait photo, and confirm the toggle is turned on.
Does depth effect wallpaper work on Android?
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No. Depth effect wallpaper is a unique iPhone feature, released with iOS 16. There is no comparable depth separation system that uses AI to generate a lock screen clock layer that threads itself behind the wallpaper at a layer in between. Android devices have parallax wallpaper options, but to my knowledge, there is no equivalent depth variant available.
Do depth effect wallpapers drain battery faster?
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No, not really. The depth effect isn’t a live animation, but a still render. When you set the wallpaper, the iPhone’s neural engine separates the layers once; after that, the layered image is treated as a static wallpaper.
The power used while waking the screen is the same as using any normal wallpaper. Live or video wallpapers, on the other hand, do have a fairly significant power overhead, as they are always running.
How to turn off depth effect on wallpaper?
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Go to Settings Wallpaper tap your lock screen preview Customize. In the wallpaper editor, tap the (three-dot menu) in the lower-right corner and turn Depth Effect off. Your wallpaper will switch back to a regular flat photo, with the clock floating on top of the image as you would expect.
Ready to Customize Your iPhone Lock i screen?
Depth effect wallpaper is actually one of the least utilized features on modern iPhones. Once you figure out the things it requires—a compatible device, a JPEG or HEIC image with a distinct foreground object, and no lock screen widgets in the way the effects can look truly incredible. And with the introduction of the Spatial Scene upgrade in iOS 26, it’s only improving.
If you want to skip the trial-and-error and go straight to wallpapers that work, iScreen’s depth effect collection has you covered. Every design is tested, optimised for the latest iOS, and ready to load in seconds. Pair your wallpaper with i screen lock screen widgets — just remember to choose one or the other. For complete iPhone customization, explore the complete iPhone customization guide from i screen.
About This Guide
This article was researched and written by the iScreen Editorial Team — creators of the top-rated iPhone customization app (10M+ downloads on the App Store). Steps were verified on iPhone 15 running iOS 26. Device compatibility data sourced from Apple Specifications pages and Apple Support documentation. Last reviewed: May 2026.
References
- Apple Newsroom — iOS 16 is available today (September 12, 2022)
- Apple Support — Create a custom iPhone Lock Screen
- Apple Support — Change your iPhone wallpaper (iOS 26 features)
- MacRumors — Five Wallpaper Apps for iOS 16”’s Lock Screen Depth Effect
- MakeUseOf — Depth Effect Not Working in iOS 16 Lock Screen? Try These 7 Fixes