No Filter: Instagram Launches Standalone ‘Instants’ App to Reclaim the Raw Moment

Instagram is trying to find its soul again. On Thursday, the company confirmed it is testing a brand-new, standalone image-sharing app called Instants. Currently live in Spain and Italy, the app targets users who are tired of the polished, over-edited world of the main Instagram feed. It lets people share disappearing photos with their friends that can only be viewed once. After 24 hours, the post vanishes forever. This move shows that Meta is desperate to win back the younger crowd that has flocked to raw, low-pressure platforms like BeReal and Locket.
The mechanics of Instants are intentionally basic. You capture a photo with a single tap. There are no filters, no editing tools, and no way to upload a perfect shot from your camera roll. You have to use the in-app camera to share what is happening right now. While you can add a little bit of text to your “instants,” you cannot modify the image at all. It is a direct attack on the “curated” lifestyle that Instagram itself helped create. By stripping away the ability to hide behind edits, the app forces users to be authentic.
Returning to the Roots of Social Media
Unlike the main Instagram app, which has become a giant mall full of ads and influencers, Instants focuses on close connections. You can only share your photos with mutual followers or your “Close Friends” list. Instagram is basically admitting that its primary app has become too impersonal. A spokesperson said they want to give people a low-pressure way to connect through casual photos and videos in the moment. They are exploring multiple versions of the app to see what people actually like.
This is not the first time we have seen these features. Instagram has been testing Instants as an internal feature for a while. Now, they are giving it its own icon and a dedicated space on iOS and Android. This allows people to choose between the standard Instagram experience or the faster, more stripped-down Instants app. It borrows heavily from the “disappearing” nature of Snapchat and the “front-back” camera trend popularized by BeReal. Meta has a long history of copying competitors, and Instants is clearly their latest attempt to neutralize a threat.
Can Instagram Win the Authenticity War?
There is a big question hanging over this launch: is it too late? The trend of low-pressure, unfiltered sharing peaked a couple of years ago. BeReal is already seeing its user numbers drop as people get bored of the gimmick. At the same time, most people already use Instagram Stories for their quick, daily updates. It is hard to say if users will feel the need to download a separate app just to do something they can already do inside the main one.
However, the “Labs” branding on the app suggests that Instagram is treating this as a serious experiment. They want to see if a separate brand can escape the “influencer” stigma that now haunts the main platform. If Instants takes off in Europe, expect a global rollout very soon. Meta knows that if they don’t provide a space for raw, messy human interaction, someone else will. The App Store is full of startups trying to be the “anti-Instagram,” and with Instants, Instagram is trying to beat them at their own game.
We are entering a phase where the internet is splitting in two. On one side, we have highly produced, AI-enhanced content designed to grab your attention. On the other, we have a growing movement of people who just want to see what their friends are actually doing. Instants is a bet that the future of social media looks a lot more like the past. It turns the clock back to a time when a photo was just a photo, not a piece of personal branding.












































































