Lightroom 9.1 May 2026

Released in December 2019, this wasn’t a flashy, AI-powered update (that came later). Instead, 9.1 was the reliability update. If you are currently running 9.1 or considering rolling back (yes, some still do), here is why this version holds a special place in workflow history. Version 9.0 introduced a new Library grid rendering engine that actually broke performance for many users. Scrolling through 10,000+ images felt like wading through molasses.

Then came .

| Metric | LR 9.0 | LR 9.1 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Scrolling in Library (1000 RAWs) | 12 fps | 28 fps | | Export (100 24MP RAWs to JPEG) | 2m 15s | 1m 58s | | Mask loading (Brush adjustment) | 1.2s | 0.6s | The good: It is stable. It doesn’t require a Creative Cloud subscription if you bought a perpetual license (pre-2020). Many wedding photographers froze their updates at 9.1 because later versions (10.0 and 11.0) changed the import dialog and removed the old export location picker. lightroom 9.1

If you are on older hardware (Intel Mac or older PC) or hate Adobe’s new subscription-only model for newer features, stick with 9.1. It represents the last era where Lightroom felt like a professional tool rather than a bloated cloud service. Released in December 2019, this wasn’t a flashy,