Pick. Keep. Breathe.

Your camera roll is full of 8,000 photos you'll never look at again. Pikpik turns the cleanup into 60 seconds a day — swipe left to delete, right to keep, up to favorite. One photo at a time. No grid view. No analysis paralysis.

One email, when Pikpik hits the App Store. No newsletter, no spam.

Currently in TestFlight · iOS · App Store soon

Three gestures. That's the whole app.

Swipe left

Delete. Goes into a review queue first — nothing's lost until you confirm.

Swipe right

Keep. Move on to the next one.

Swipe up

Favorite. The ones worth keeping a closer eye on.

Why Pikpik feels different.

One photo at a time

No grid view. No "select all that look bad." Just you and the next single decision. It's the difference between cleaning a room and cleaning a drawer.

Nothing leaves your phone

No accounts. No server. No analytics SDKs watching what you swipe. Photos are read by iOS, shown to you, and that's the end of the loop.

Pending delete queue

Photos you swipe left aren't gone forever. They sit in a review queue until you confirm. Change your mind? Restore them.

Smart filters

Target by year ("clean up 2019"), by size ("show me 10MB+ videos hogging space"), or by album ("just the screenshots"). Pick your battle.

Open source, by design.

If you've ever wondered whether a privacy policy is actually being followed, you can read the code yourself. Pikpik is about 2,000 lines of TypeScript and there isn't a single network call to a Pikpik server, because there is no Pikpik server.

The only network call the app makes at runtime is to RevenueCat to validate subscription state. RevenueCat sees an anonymous device ID and your Apple purchase receipt — never your name, email, or photos.

Read the source on GitHub →

Quick questions.

How much does it cost?

Free to install and use, with 50 swipes per day. Pikpik Pro unlocks unlimited daily swipes — available as weekly, yearly, or one-time lifetime purchases. Pricing finalized at launch.

Will it work on Android?

Not at launch — Pikpik is iOS-only for v1. Android may come later if there's demand.

When I delete a photo, is it gone forever?

On iOS, deleted photos move to your Recently Deleted album for 30 days before iOS permanently removes them. So even after you confirm deletion in Pikpik, you have a 30-day window to restore from the Photos app.

What about videos?

Videos work the same as photos. Swipe left to delete, right to keep, up to favorite. The card shows a brief preview so you can decide quickly.

How do I get a refund?

Subscriptions and one-time purchases are handled by Apple, so refunds go through Apple. Visit reportaproblem.apple.com, find Pikpik, and request a refund. If Apple denies it for any reason, email hello@pikpik.app.