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ISO in Photography: Know the correct setting for any picture

The ISO is one of the first settings that a new photographer learns to set on their camera.  Without the ISO, you would be very limited in the lighting conditions you could take pictures in.  I'll do my best to explain the concept simply and directly at first, and then we'll add in lots of examples and more advanced information.

Understanding the ISO is easy.  Just remember this: The ISO setting on a camera controls its sensitivity to light.  If you shoot in a low-light situation, you'll need a higher ISO to properly expose the picture.  If it's bright where you're taking a picture, then you can use a low ISO.  The benefit of keeping your ISO low is that it produces a photo that is less noisy. Low-light: high ISO; bright light: low ISO

Oh, and before we get any further, we need to cover one important thing.  ISO is pronounced “eye-so” and never “I.S.O.”  I know lots of photographers say it that way, but they are wrong.

Suggested ISO Settings for Various Shooting Situations

I want to give some suggestions on where I usually set my ISO for various shooting situations to give you an idea of what you might pick.  Keep in mind that newer cameras will do much better with noise than older cameras, so you might not be able to get up as high if you're on an older camera.  If you want to understand more about how ISO, aperture, and shutter speed work together, please take a minute to read our highly-regarded Photo Basics Series.  That page also has a convenient cheat sheet for setting your exposure.

  • Photographing the Milky Way at night – ISO 3200.  Unless you have an extremely fast-aperture lens like an f/1.8, you'll probably be at ISO 3200 to gather enough light to photograph the Milky Way.  When doing night photography, you can't really go longer than 15 seconds of shutter speed or else the stars will look oblong due to the rotation of the earth.
  • Outdoor sports photography on a bright day – ISO 100.  Since it's bright outside, you'll have no problem exposing the photo.  Even if you choose a fast 1/2000 shutter speed to freeze the action of the moving athletes, you'll be fine with ISO 100 on a bright day.
  • Taking product photos on a white backdrop and using flashes – ISO 100.  In this case, you might as well stay at ISO 100 to get a noise-free image, because if you need more light you can simply increase the power of the flash.
  • High school basketball game with dim gym lighting – ISO 3200.  This high of an ISO will certainly produce some noise in the photo, but it's probably necessary.  Because the players are moving around quickly, you can't reduce your shutter speed to gather more light, and your aperture will probably be maxed out in a situation like this.
  • Indoor family photos not near a window – ISO 1600.  Even with all of the lights on in a room, it's usually dimmer than you might imagine.  Unless your home is very bright, you usually won't be able to take pictures at ISO 100 even if you cheat down on your shutter speed and use a fast aperture.
  • Photographing a waterfall – ISO 100.  This obviously depends on how bright it is near the waterfall, but generally, you'd want a low ISO so that you could get a long shutter speed and make the water look silkier.  If you increased your ISO and shot with a slow shutter speed, the resulting image would probably be too bright even if you used a small aperture.
  • Photographing a sunset – ISO 800.  This is tough to put a number on because before the sun goes down, it's usually still quite bright; however, most landscape photographers know that the best sunset color is usually after the sun is under the horizon for about 20 minutes.  In this case, it'll be quite dark.  You may be able to use a long shutter speed of 2 seconds if everything in the scene is still (like a mountain in front of the sunset) in which case you could use ISO 100.  But if you're near ocean waves, for example, you'd need a little higher ISO so the shutter speed could be kept up.

How Does the ISO Work?

The job of the imaging sensor on your camera is to record the light that comes through the lens.  This is the raw information that your camera will use to produce a picture.  Your camera sensor tries to determine what is light hitting the sensor, and what may be a stray electric signal, excess heat from the camera, etc.  When the subject of your photo is very bright, it's easy for the sensor to tell the difference because the signal-to-noise ratio is high.  When the light is weak, the sensor has a harder time determining what is extraneous heat or electricity, and what is light.  This is why the ISO makes the image brighter, but also why higher ISO photos have more noise in them.

Suppose you are listening to an audiobook on your phone, but the recording isn't very good.  What would you do to understand the words more clearly?  You'd probably turn up the volume.  When you do, you're able to make out the voices better, but it also means the sound of the noise in the recording is amplified.  ISO works the same way.  Just as turning up the volume makes the voice louder but also increases the noise in the recording, the ISO helps the camera capture more light but it also amplifies the noise in the picture.

How High Can You Set Your ISO?

Each camera has an ISO range that usually starts at 64, 100, or 200 as the lowest ISO available.  Then, that number roughly doubles with each setting until it gets to the max available on that camera.  Each time the ISO doubles, it means twice as much light is gathered.  This doubling of the gathered light is referred to as one “stop” of light.  You'll hear people say, “Yikes.  That photo is about two stops overexposed” and they mean the light is about 4x brighter than it should be in the photo.  You may also hear people on the bus say “You should get off at the third stop”, but that's something completely different.  Don't be confused.  🙂

The max ISO setting available on cameras depends on the specific model.  Here are a few common examples:

  • Nikon D3400 – ISO 100 to ISO 25,600 (Not expandable)
  • Canon Rebel T6i – ISO 100 to ISO 12,800 (Expandable to ISO 25,600)
  • Sony a7s ii – ISO 100 to ISO 102,400 (Expandable to ISO 409,600)
  • Canon 5D Mark IV – ISO 100 to ISO 32,000 (Expandable to ISO 102,400)
  • Nikon D850 – ISO 64 to ISO 25,600 (Expandable to ISO 102,400)

Note that the highest number a camera advertises is NOT the highest ISO that will produce a noise-free image, and that just because one camera's max ISO number is higher than another does not mean that it does better in low light.  The only way to know if a camera does better than another one in low-light is to actually go test them.

Also, note that in the above list I included the “expandable ISO.”  This is just ISO that is performed with software on the camera to brighten the image.  The expandable ISOs are always so incredibly grainy that you'll never use them.  It's just a way for the camera manufacturers to advertise something that sounds impressive.

How high you can set your ISO and still produce a clean image that is relatively noise-free depends on (1) your camera, and (2) the subject of the photo.

  • Your Camera.  When I started shooting digital cameras seriously, I used a Canon Rebel XS.  On that camera, ISO 800 was very noisy.  Now, many years later, I can shoot at ISO 800 and not notice any noise whatsoever.  With each year, sensors improve and produce better low-light performance.  Higher-end cameras also perform quite a bit better than entry-level cameras.
  • The Subject of the Photo.  Shooting a portrait of someone and then shooting a landscape at the same camera settings will obviously produce the same amount of noise; however, it's important to keep in mind that we have a higher tolerance for noise in some types of images just because we know that it's a necessary evil.  For example, shooting a sports photo at a high school football game under the dim lights simply isn't possible without some noise in the photo.  You have to accept some amount of noise.  The same is true for night photography.  However, in wedding photos or portraits, we generally have a lower tolerance for noise because they can be captured relatively noise-free if the camera is set properly.

The best way to know how high you can get away with setting your ISO is to simply go into your living room and have a family member sit on a chair.  Set your camera to ISO 100 and compensate with your aperture and shutter speed to try to expose the photo properly.  Then move up to ISO 200, ISO 400, ISO 800, ISO 1600, ISO 3200, ISO 6400 up to the highest ISO your camera has.  Then go look at the images on a computer screen and see how high you can go.  Remember that you'll have to tolerate some noise in very dark situations where there is no other choice, but this will give you an idea of how high to set it.

Learn to Confidently Set Your Camera Settings

If you are brand new to photography, it really is worth spending a little time learning to set your camera's aperture, ISO, and shutter speed confidently.  If you spend a few minutes learning how to do it in an organized way, it'll put you two years ahead of most people who buy a camera and then never really learn how to use it.

Please take a minute and check out my Photography Start video tutorial.  It's a video series you can stream or download to your computer.  It's the very simplest way I know how to get you started taking breathtaking pictures in just a couple weeks.  The class is easy and you can learn it in one night.

20 thoughts on “ISO in Photography: Know the correct setting for any picture”

    1. I’ve been photographing high school sports for a newspaper for the last couple of months, but everything has been outdoors either sunny or overcast. I shoot in manual and have been using auto ISO and just setting the minimum and maximum values, it really works great and just gives me one less thing to worry about. My question is, can i still use the auto ISO technique for indoor sports or sports at night under lights if i just raise the minimum and maximum values? would you recommend it?

    2. hello . accidentally i made some photos in nature with sunny with max iso of my camera , 3200. can i slow down this iso for my photos? my photos are not clear, are very bad. respectfully

  1. Photographing deer with a Nikon 7100 and Nikon 200-500mm lens. I think iso 800-1000 with AV and 1/500 is the best. However, I find quite a bit of noise in Lightroom. In Lightroom, what zoom level should I use to judge if the noise is acceptible for printing? 100% shows a lot of noise. 50%? 25%?

    1. @Shane – It really depends on how big you’re printing and the type of print. It also depends on the subject. Out of focus areas will REALLY show some nasty noise more than in-focus areas. If that’s the case, then you could do noise reduction just on the out of focus areas.

  2. I have a NIKON D 5100 that its out of the marcket and its a sham of a camera. The harder i try to tacke photos the worst the out come. I will start tryinng your advise about ISO but any way i use my other NIKON 800 and that is a CAMERA for all type and kind of photos i want to shot. Thancks for sharing your nollige about PHOTOGRAFHIE. All the best
    A amatuer photografer . A.S.

    1. Hey Antonio. The D5100 is a good camera, but you’re right that the D800 is much better 🙂 Glad the article was helpful. Appreciate the comment.

  3. How do you feel about auto ISO? I photograph wildlife and they are constantly moving into different lighting (thinking elk in the woods). Maybe I need to learn to adjust my ISO faster but right now I have it on auto. I have a Nikon D5300.

  4. A really quick tip to cleaning up digital noise:

    In Photoshop, just make a copy of the image on a top layer. Then use ADOBE CAMERA RAW filter and go to the details setting. Crank up the noise reduction. Now go back into Photoshop.

    Apply a layer mask (WHITE) and just paint with black paint to eliminate the noise reduction in areas where you want to keep maximum detail. Adjust layer opacity to your taste.

    This is leave a nice clean image in out of focus areas while maintaining the sharpness and detail in areas of focus or on important details in the shot!

  5. For shooting inside my camera is set to manual and I set my camera at ISO 100 and shoot near a window with lots of natural light, then when I load my photos into lightroom the ISO on all my photos in is the 2,000-3,000 range.

    I’m clearly doing something wrong with my settings, but I can’t figure it out. Or figure out how to take pictures that will have an ISO in the 100-300 range when they are loaded. What am I doing wrong? (I am usually shooting at fstop 6.3, 1/125).

    Any advice would be appreciated! Thank you!

    1. Of the ISO is changing after you set it to 100 then you probably have auto ISO enabled in the menu. You can go into the menu and turn it off or adjust the parameters to twll it a max ISO to use when in auto ISO.

  6. this article helped me also it is pretty much helpful, and I am a student in this field so help me to know it very well by sending some messages on the website I wrote below I use my name every where

  7. I would be interested in any thoughts about Conni’s question concerning auto ISO. I am wondering if I should use it, instead of choosing a fixed ISO setting. I typically shoot in aperture priority, and use a Nikon D7100. Should it also be limited in its possible range, and tied to a minimum shutter speed?

  8. Awesome article Jim,
    i am an amature photographer, and recently a friend, who is a competing bodybuilder approached me to take few pics of him.
    I’ve never shot any person as a model.

    Now my backdrop is my Gym, (it is well lit with big white fluroscent lights).
    I just wanted to understand what ISO shall i use?

    By the way, i own a Nikon D3200 DSLR with kit lens and a 55-300mm zoom lens.

    Im thinking to purchase a flash gun, and hire some lighting equipments.

    Any help is much appreciated.

    Thanks

  9. I would like to buy fugifilm x-t2 but the manual iso is 200 to 12800, I like to shooting on iso 100, but fugi using iso 100 as expandable, would I have bad quality because of that?

  10. Thanks for a great article! I have one question, however. I’m over half a century old, and my Dad was a chemical engineer at Kodak, on the team helping the company become the world leader in color film, as well as helping figure out how to reclaim all that silver that was in film! (the silver halide reclamation process).

    As you might guess, my first brownie was a camera. I just find it really hard to believe that when he taught me to pronounce it “I.S.O.” he was “wrong”. In the company of his colleagues it was said “I.S.O.”. Did this truly change? If so, when? VERY curious! 🙂

    Thanks again!

  11. I have a EOS 7D Camera and am interested in getting a few good shots of my children playing basketball in a high school gym situation. I am also trying to use my Canon Zoom lens EF 70-200mm. A lot of my photos are blurry, some are reasonable but I am hoping to get a bit better so I don’t have to sift through millions of photos to get that one OK photo….thanks

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