Disclosure: I work on Opennomos.
I've tried a lot of photo cleaning apps. Most of them share the same problems: bloated install sizes, mandatory accounts, cloud uploads you didn't ask for, and subscription paywalls that hit you after the "free trial" ends.
Swipe Cleaner does none of these things. And that's what makes it interesting.
What Is Swipe Cleaner?
It's a 4.7MB iOS app that helps you clean up your photo library. The core mechanic is Tinder-style swiping: left to delete, right to keep, up to favorite.
No account required. No cloud processing. Everything happens locally on your device.
The Problem It Solves
Here's a scenario every iPhone user knows:
You open Photos, see "5,237 items," and immediately close it. The decision fatigue is real. Every photo demands a judgment call — keep or delete? Is this screenshot still useful? Do I need 14 versions of the same sunset?
System tools aren't much help. The built-in duplicate detection is decent, but it doesn't handle screenshots, blurry photos, or burst-mode leftovers well. And bulk-selecting photos in the grid view feels like surgery with a spoon.
Three Things Swipe Cleaner Gets Right
1. Privacy by Design, Not by Policy
This is the big one. Swipe Cleaner is completely on-device. Zero network requests for photo processing. Your photos never leave your phone.
Compare this to mainstream cleaners that upload your library for "AI-powered organization" or "smart categorization." The privacy policy might say they delete your data after processing. Swipe Cleaner eliminates the question entirely — there's nothing to trust because there's nothing to upload.
For developers: the app bundles Apple's on-device ML models (Vision framework) for photo analysis. No custom model servers, no API keys to leak.
2. Tinder-Style Decision Making
The swipe mechanic isn't just a gimmick. It solves a real UX problem: reducing the cognitive cost of each decision.
Traditional flow: tap photo → evaluate → tap delete → confirm → next photo. Five interactions per photo.
Swipe Cleaner flow: see photo → swipe. One interaction.
The speed difference is dramatic. I cleared ~400 photos in about 15 minutes — most of them screenshots and near-duplicates that I'd been meaning to delete for months.
The app categorizes photos into filters: Screenshots, Live Photos, Bursts, Similar, Blurry. You can focus on one category at a time, which reduces the "where do I even start" paralysis.
3. Confirmation List as Safety Net
Batch deletion is fast but risky. Swipe Cleaner's answer is a confirmation list — all photos marked for deletion go into a pending list. You review everything before the final purge.
This is different from the iOS "Recently Deleted" album (which is post-deletion recovery). The confirmation list is a pre-deletion checkpoint. It gives you the confidence to swipe fast, knowing you'll get a second look.
What Could Be Better
No app is perfect. A few things I'd like to see:
- Video support: Currently focuses on photos. Large video files are often the biggest space hogs.
- iCloud integration awareness: If you use iCloud Photos, deleting locally doesn't always free up space immediately. Some guidance here would help.
- Batch export: A "save these to Files before deleting" option for important-but-bulky photos.
Size Matters
At 4.7MB, Swipe Cleaner is smaller than a single high-res photo. The entire app binary is about 0.0001% of a 64GB iPhone's storage. For context:
- Google Photos: ~250MB+
- Cleaner Guru: ~150MB+
- Swipe Cleaner: 4.7MB
This matters more than people think. Large app sizes correlate with feature bloat, bundled SDKs, and analytics frameworks — all things that conflict with the privacy-first approach.
The Verdict
Swipe Cleaner is not trying to be an AI-powered digital assistant that "understands your photo collection." It's a focused tool that does one thing well: help you delete unwanted photos quickly, privately, and with a safety net.
For a 4.7MB app with no sign-up flow and no server costs to recoup, that's exactly the right ambition.
If you've been putting off the "clean my camera roll" task because it feels overwhelming, this is the tool that turns it from a weekend project into a coffee-break task.
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