Google wants Android flagships to beat iPhones on Instagram

For years, Android phone makers have packed their flagship devices with camera systems powerful enough to rival professional gear. Yet the moment a photo or video hit Instagram, much of that polish seemed to disappear. Videos lost detail, low-light clips turned muddy, and uploads often looked noticeably worse than content posted from iPhones.

Now, Google says it is finally tackling that long-standing frustration head-on.to dramatically improve

Announced during the Android Show 2026 at Google I/O, the company revealed a new partnership with Meta aimed at dramatically improving the Instagram experience on premium Android phones.

Instagram on Android is finally getting flagship treatment

Google says it has worked closely with Instagram to improve everything from image capture to the final upload process. The result, according to the company, is a much more polished experience on high-end Android devices.

Among the biggest upgrades is support for Ultra HDR photos on Instagram. That means images captured on compatible Android flagships will retain richer highlights, deeper contrast, and more realistic lighting when viewed inside the app.

Video quality is also receiving attention, with built-in stabilization tools designed to reduce shakiness before clips even reach Instagram’s compression pipeline.

Night photography is another area seeing improvements. Google’s Night Sight technology, which has long been one of the standout features on Pixel phones, is now being integrated more deeply into Instagram’s camera experience. In theory, this should allow users to capture clearer, brighter low-light content directly for social media rather than relying on separate camera apps.

Google claims it has also “completely optimized” the journey from capture to upload. In side-by-side testing using the Universal Video Quality model, the company says videos uploaded from Android flagship devices scored as well as, or even better than, uploads from the “leading competitor”, an obvious nod to Apple’s iPhone.

Android’s creator ambitions go beyond better uploads

Google’s announcements were not limited to image quality alone. The company is also introducing several creator-focused AI features designed specifically for Android users.

The Instagram Edits app is gaining Android-exclusive tools powered by on-device AI. One of them, called Smart Enhance, can upscale photos and videos with a single tap, sharpening detail and improving clarity automatically.

Another feature focuses on sound separation, allowing users to isolate different audio elements such as background music, voices, or wind noise, then adjust them individually.

Google also unveiled a new feature called Screen Reactions. It lets users record both their screen and front-facing camera at the same time, making reaction videos easier to create without extra software or green-screen setups. The feature will arrive first on Pixel devices later this summer.

Taken together, the announcements signal a shift in how Google sees Android’s role in the creator economy. Instead of simply supporting social apps, the company wants Android devices to become the preferred tools for content creation itself.

And after years of Android uploads being mocked for looking worse online, Google clearly believes it finally has a chance to change that narrative.

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