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Stop Your iPhone Suppressing Background Audio in Videos

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In iOS, Apple's Audio Zoom feature automatically focuses your iPhone's microphones on whatever you've zoomed in on while recording video. It's great for isolating a subject in a noisy environment, but it can also strip away the ambient sound that can give your footage a broader context. Fortunately, iOS 26.4 adds a dedicated toggle for Audio Zoom so you can decide for yourself when it's truly required.

iphone 16 pro rear cameras

What Is Audio Zoom?

Audio Zoom is likely to be most useful if you're recording at a concert, sporting event, or any scenario where you want to isolate a specific sound source from a noisy environment. But what if you want to capture the full acoustic experience rather than just the subject you've zoomed in on? In those situations, the audio narrowing effect could risk making your video sound flat and unnatural.

In iOS 26.4, Audio Zoom is on by default, but now you can also turn it off. If you haven't updated yet, head to Settings ➝ General ➝ Software Update on your iPhone to download the latest version. Once you're up and running, here's how to find the setting:

  1. Open Settings on your iPhone.
  2. Scroll down and tap Camera.
  3. Tap Record Sound.
  4. Toggle Audio Zoom on or off.

settings

Note that Audio Zoom only works when Spatial Audio or Stereo is selected as your recording format. If you've switched to Mono, the option will be grayed out.

If you shoot a lot of zoomed-in video and want the clearest possible audio of your subject, it's best to leave Audio Zoom enabled. But if you prefer capturing the full ambient soundscape of a scene regardless of zoom level, be sure to switch it off.

Top Rated Comments

DanteHicks79 Avatar
2 hours ago at 11:01 am

I keep wondering whether people who constantly film at concerts actually watch their footage afterwards. It's ALWAYS going to sound crap.
Speak for yourself. I am constantly amazed at how clear and great sounding the audio I've captured on my 15PM at concerts has been. Apple worked real magic when they coded the algorithms that process incoming sound. I would never have expected a consumer device, let alone a phone, be able to produce such spectacular sound.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 hours ago at 09:00 am

I keep wondering whether people who constantly film at concerts actually watch their footage afterwards. It's ALWAYS going to sound crap.
Maybe with a smartphone from 15 years ago. I've recorded many times at concerts and gotten great video and audio, and often rewatch those recordings to experience it again.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 hours ago at 08:40 am

I keep wondering whether people who constantly film at concerts actually watch their footage afterwards. It's ALWAYS going to sound crap.
You don't have to immediately justify every memory saved. That's no different than the photo albums people saved before digital existed and was this convenient. Saved away, and then brought out decades later as a reminder or to show the next generation. It doesn't have to be perfect to have value.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
hybrid_x Avatar
4 hours ago at 08:28 am
Why isn't this a toggle right in the camera interface?
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
aries81 Avatar
4 hours ago at 08:26 am
I keep wondering whether people who constantly film at concerts actually watch their footage afterwards. It's ALWAYS going to sound crap.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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