The best iPhone apps

The best iPhone apps 2020



Apps are the cornerstone of the iPhone – what really set it apart from Android. The best iPhone apps are typically best in class.However, finding the greatest apps among the millions available isn’t easy, and so we’ve done the hard work for you. Our lists compile the very best the iPhone has to offer, whether using your iPhone for photos, video, drawing, music, office tasks, reading, maps, weather forecasts or keeping kids entertained.Jump to section- Best photo editing apps - Best animation / video editing apps - Best art and design apps - Best entertainment apps - Best health, diet and exercise apps - Best kids' apps - 

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Best music and audio apps - Best office and writing apps - Best productivity apps - Best travel and weather appsThis round-up compiles our favourites, from top-quality creative tools and video editors to the finest productivity kit and social networking clients.In addition to our ongoing list of the absolute best, every month we're adding our picks for the latest and greatest new or updated apps, so check back often.Even if you don't have an iPhone right now, it's worth reading up on what's available if you're considering investing in one of the phones in the iPhone 12 range or even one of the older models (if you need more info, check out our list of the best iPhones) - but note that some of these titles will only work with more recent models.Read on below for our app pick of the last month, then click through to the following pages for the best iPhone apps across a range of categories.Need an upgrade? Consult our guide to the best iPhone dealsBest iPhone app of the month: Longplay(Image credit: Adrian Schoenig)$2.99/£2.99/AU$4.99Longplay is designed to make you fall in love with playing albums all over again, instead of experiencing music as a series of unconnected tracks. To help you achieve this, the app presents your collection as a grid of covers, which can be ordered in various ways: alphabetically, by rating, on the basis of play count, or - oddly - by artwork brightness. Tap a cover and the album starts playing.Because Longplay wants you listening to entire albums, it marginalizes other controls. Although it is possible to skip tracks, that functionality only exists in a pop-up. Primary interaction is play/pause on the current album cover. The result is an app that might not be one you use every time you fancy listening to music, but that’s a good bet for rediscovering neglected favorites and the joy of focusing on albums again.Best iPhone photo editing and camera appsThese are our favorite iPhone apps for editing snaps, capturing photos and video and applying the filters that actually make things look good.(Image credit: Code Organa)Inkwork$2.99/£2.99/AU$4.49Inkwork is an app designed to instantly transform a photo into a sketch-based work of art. And, yes, we’ve seen this all before – but few filter apps catch the eye in quite the same way as Inkwork.The interface is sleek and polished. You can quickly switch background and ink colors, and the size of the strokes, thereby making your virtual sketch more detailed or abstract, but really it’s the filters themselves you’ll spend most time fiddling with.There are loads of them – perhaps a few too many, because the choice can initially be a bit overwhelming – but for anyone who likes black and white art, there’s everything here from scratchy pen hatching to stylized comic-book fare. Selections happen instantly and without needing the internet, cementing the app’s place in our list.(Image credit: Moment Inc.)RTROFree + IAPRTRO is a vintage camera app from the folks behind Pro Camera. But whereas that app’s a serious sort, attempting to transform your iPhone into a DSLR, RTRO is a mite more playful.That doesn’t mean the app isn’t stylish, though; RTRO has a minimalist retro vibe that sits nicely alongside its various vintage looks that you apply to your movies. These range from distressed VHS fuzz to subtle color shifts and film grain. Every filter has notes from its creator, outlining what they were aiming for.Shooting is simple, and you can capture up to 60 seconds of video across multiple shots, before sharing your miniature masterpiece with your social network of choice. Neatly, although there is a subscription charge, you can alternatively opt to buy one-off looks at a couple of bucks a pop.(Image credit: Indice Ltd)Apollo$2.99/£2.99/AU$4.99Apollo enables you to apply new light sources to Portrait Mode photos. This kind of photo records depth information, and can be shot on any relatively recent iPhone (iPhone 7 Plus/8 Plus/any ‘X’ iPhone). In Apple’s Photos app, you can add studio-style lighting, but Apollo takes things further.The interface is usable, and offers scope for creativity. It’s simple to add multiple lights, and then for each one define distance, color, brightness, spread, and mask effects for simulating effects such as shadows being cast from light coming through a window blind.Apollo perhaps isn’t an iPhone app if y

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