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Instagram iPad app debuts with Reels, Stories, and photo feeds

After 15 years of requests, Instagram arrives on iPad with a Reels-first design, a Following tab for photos, and a split-screen inbox for direct messages.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Sep 4, 2025, 2:37 AM EDT
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Instagram iPad app screen showing the reels tab.
Image: Instagram / Meta
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After a decade-and-a-half of half-measures, workarounds and endless “when will we get an iPad app?” tweets, Instagram has finally shipped a native iPad app. Beginning Wednesday, September 3, users worldwide can download an experience built specifically for Apple’s tablets — and it feels very much like a product designed for right now, not for nostalgia.

That “for right now” line matters. The iPad app doesn’t open to the chronologically ordered photo feed that long-time users fondly remember. Instead, it opens straight to Reels — Instagram’s answer to TikTok — with Stories, the classic feed and DMs sitting behind new layouts and tabs. That design choice is the clearest signal yet that Instagram sees the future of social on big screens as an immersive, autoplaying, short-form-video experience.

Why it took 15 years

There are obvious technical reasons Instagram didn’t ship an iPad client earlier: iPadOS presents more surface area, multiple windowing modes and a different interaction model than iPhone, and optimizing a mobile-first app for that canvas takes time. But the delay was also, famously, a product-priority problem: Instagram leadership repeatedly said the audience demanding a tablet experience simply wasn’t large enough to make the work urgent. Adam Mosseri has made that point publicly before.

Your browser does not support the video tag.

So what changed? The answer is twofold. First, tablets — especially among younger users and households with kids — have grown into a bigger piece of where people watch video and scroll feeds. Second, the competitive pressure from TikTok and the regulatory noise around it nudged Meta to double down on Reels as a growth and revenue surface. In short, when short-form video becomes the battleground, a native iPad experience that puts Reels front and center becomes strategically useful.

Instagram iPad app
Image: Instagram / Meta

What’s different on iPad

The app is familiar in features — you still get Stories across the top, you can switch to a “Following” tab that looks and scrolls more like the old photo-heavy Instagram, and you can choose chronological-ish views — but the layout leverages extra pixels to change behaviors:

  • Reels open full-bleed and autoplay; comments appear next to the video rather than as a tiny overlay, so you don’t have to lose the picture to read the chat.
  • DMs are shown in a two-column layout: your inbox on the left, conversations on the right, much closer to what Messenger looks like on desktop. It’s a small change, but it makes conversations feel less cramped.
  • A “Following” tab gives people who prefer still photos a place to surf content more like the classic Instagram — including some chronological options — without deleting Reels from the centre stage.
Instagram iPad app screen showing the following tab.
Image: Instagram / Meta

Meta says an equivalent layout is “coming soon” to Android tablets, which suggests the company sees tablet optimization less as a one-off and more as part of a broader push to make Reels the default way people spend time across larger devices.

This isn’t just UI — it’s platform strategy

The iPad app’s design mirrors bigger strategic bets Instagram has been making all year. Reels have steadily gotten more capable — Instagram raised the allowed length for Reels earlier this year, added playback options like fast-forward, and introduced reposting mechanics that make the format more like TikTok. At the same time, Meta has been courting creators with financial incentives and bonus programs to keep them posting to Reels rather than exclusively to rivals. Put those moves together with an iPad app that prioritizes Reels and you can see a single story: Meta is trying to extend its short-form-video moat into every place people watch social video.

For creators, the iPad app is an opportunity and a challenge. Longer Reels let people tell deeper stories on the platform, and a larger canvas makes editing and audience engagement less fiddly — but creators who built audiences on still photography or carefully curated grids may find their work harder to surface in an environment optimized for scrollable, autoplaying clips. Not everyone is thrilled: parts of Instagram’s older user base reacted to the Reels-first approach with frustration, arguing that a tablet app would have been a perfect place to revive the photo-forward Instagram many people miss.

The revenue angle

It’s not accidental that Reels-first design and tablet optimization landed together. Video — and short video in particular — has become a premium ad surface because it locks attention and increases completion metrics. Bigger screens mean ads can be larger, more immersive, and potentially more valuable to advertisers. That’s likely part of the calculus for Meta: the iPad app is not only a product play but also another canvas for monetization.

What to expect next

Expect iterative changes. Meta has been experimental with Reels length limits, reposting features and creator bonuses; the iPad app will probably evolve quickly as Meta measures how users respond on larger screens. Android tablets are next on the roadmap, and we’ll likely see tweaks that let creators and brands test format-specific strategies for tablets — longer-form storytelling on Reels, new ad placements, or creator-first monetization experiments.

For users who have been asking for a proper iPad app for years, the release is a welcome — if imperfect — answer. Instagram finally recognizes that watching social video on a tablet can be a different, more comfortable experience. Just don’t open the app expecting a time capsule of Instagram circa 2015. This one was built in 2025, and it was designed to show you, quickly and in full screen, a lot of short videos.


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