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X just added a much better built-in photo editor

Posting images on X is about to get a lot less annoying

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A white X on a black background, which could be Twitter's new logo.
X

X is finally fixing one of the more annoying parts of posting images on the platform. The company’s head of product Nikita Bier announced that X is launching a “brand new Photo Editor” inside the post composer.

Bier said the update adds “long-overdue features like drawing and texting,” bringing a more functional built-in editing experience instead of the barebones image tools users have been stuck with so far.

What’s new with the updated Photo Editor?

Ladies and gentlemen, we’re launching a brand new Photo Editor in our post composer.

It has long-overdue features like drawing & text. But we also included special add-ons that are unique to X:

• Edit with words, powered by Grok
• Add a blur to redact parts of the photo… pic.twitter.com/38Zaw8b5jl

— Nikita Bier (@nikitabier) April 7, 2026

The big new update on the photo editor is the tools it provides. X users can now draw on images, add text overlays, and blur or redact parts of a picture before posting. While all of this sounds basic in 2026, it is a pretty meaningful quality-of-life upgrade. Users have long had to rely on other apps just to do simple edits before uploading screenshots, memes, or annotated images.

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So the updated photo editor feels less like a new feature and more like X finally catching up on something that probably should have existed a while ago.

A small update that actually makes sense

Bier has been more public about small but practical feature updates, and this one falls squarely into this category. Instead of reinventing the image poster, X is just making it more capable. For people who tweet frequently, especially creators, reporters, and anyone sharing screenshots, having access to these tools directly in the composer is quite useful.

That’s not all, users can even edit images with words, as the photo editor is powered by Grok. So users can modify images using natural language prompts that go beyond simple editing and into lightweight AI image editing. It also gives X a more direct way to fold Grok into the posting workflow itself, instead of keeping it limited to a separate chatbot-style experience.

This is not the kind of feature that will radically change how people use X. But it is the kind of upgrade that makes the app feel more polished. For now, the rollout is live on iOS, while Android users will have to wait a bit longer. Bier did not provide a specific Android release date in the post, only saying it is coming soon.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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