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Spotted a mistake on your Instagram Story? You can finally edit it after posting

Instagram's new Edit Story feature means no more deleting and starting over.

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We have all posted an Instagram Story with a typo and had no choice but to delete the whole thing and start over. Those days may be finally be behind you.

Instagram is finally rolling out the ability to edit a Story after it has already been posted. It seems to be a limited rollout for now. Social media consultant Matt Navarra was among the first to flag it on X.

It’s happening! Edit Stories! 🚨@Instagram is rolling out the ability to Edit Story after posting!

Have you got this yet? pic.twitter.com/hkGnUF0H9P

— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) May 15, 2026

Several other users have since confirmed they are seeing the feature too, posting their own screenshots on Threads.

What does the Edit Story feature actually let you do?

From what the screenshots show, the feature should give you a way to go back into a Story you have already published and make changes without pulling it down entirely.

There is also a warning that reads: “Once you start editing, the original version of this story will be deleted. Any likes, reactions or comments received will be reset.”

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It is unclear at this point which elements will be editable once the feature is fully live, whether that includes text, captions, stickers, emojis, links, or tags. We will update this story as soon as we know more.

Is Instagram’s Edit Story feature available for everyone?

Not yet. The feature appears to be in a limited rollout at the moment, with only some iOS users reporting access to it so far. Android users may get access at a later stage as the rollout expands. Instagram has not confirmed anything officially, but with multiple users already seeing it, the wait should not be too long.

Instagram has been busy with updates lately, recently letting users edit comments within a 15-minute window of posting and launching Instants, a disappearing photo feature for close friends, though removing end-to-end encryption from DMs was a move that did not sit well with a lot of users.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
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