Photos 11 in Tahoe won't open older Photo Libraries

I have a lot of pictures going back over 20 years and I got concerned about the size of my files so I started splitting them up by time period. Due to this, I don't open the older ones that often, but the oldest set I did open under MacOS 14 - Sonoma, and I believe I had it open under MacOS 15 - Sequoia. It does reside on an external hard disk, but it's directly connected, not through a network or cloud.


I'm running a Mac Mini M1 from 2020 with MacOS 26 - Tahoe. First thing I noticed is that it isn't easy to open a Photo Library that isn't under the primary Pictures/Photo Library.photoslibrary file. I've used the option key and double click on the old Photo Library file and get the response "Cannot Import Item. This item cannot be added to your Photo library because it may be an unrecognized file format or the file may not contain valid data". First off, I don't want to merge it to my current Photo Library, this file is of my older photos and I want to keep them separate for the reasons mentioned earlier. The message goes on to say that the file I selected must be repaired.


The photo Repair option, selected with the Option key + Command key and double clicking the Photos App, seems to only work on the default library. I attempted to address this my saving my default current library elsewhere and moving my older library into /<User>/Pictures and renaming it Photos Library.photoslibrary.


The OS is too smart for me as it still recognizes the relocated default as the default and doesn't use the file /<User>/Pictures/Photos Library.photoslibrary when I run Repair.


Is there a way to recover the photos in my old library?

Mac mini, macOS 26.0

Posted on Nov 7, 2025 8:14 PM

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Posted on Nov 7, 2025 10:12 PM

You were close with the option key, but the steps are a little different.


First, quit from the Photos app entirely with Command-Q or the Quit command in the Photos Menu.

Next, hold down the option key while launching the Photos application from the Dock or the Applications folder.

Photos should display a list of all of the library files it can find on your disk volume(s) that it thinks it can open, with indications of which is your current system library and perhaps other status notes.

Select the library you wish to open.


Later, you can repeat the process to switch back to your normal library. Until you do that, Photos will continue to use whichever library you opened last.

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Nov 7, 2025 10:12 PM in response to Bounder6733

You were close with the option key, but the steps are a little different.


First, quit from the Photos app entirely with Command-Q or the Quit command in the Photos Menu.

Next, hold down the option key while launching the Photos application from the Dock or the Applications folder.

Photos should display a list of all of the library files it can find on your disk volume(s) that it thinks it can open, with indications of which is your current system library and perhaps other status notes.

Select the library you wish to open.


Later, you can repeat the process to switch back to your normal library. Until you do that, Photos will continue to use whichever library you opened last.

Nov 8, 2025 1:28 AM in response to Bounder6733

"The photo Repair option, selected with the Option key + Command key and double clicking the Photos App, seems to only work on the default library."


When you double click the Photos.app icon, this will open the last Photos Library you have used with Photos, not necessarily the System Photos Library. To repair a different Photos Library, not the last opened one, you will have to use these steps:

  • Quit Photos, if it is running.
  • Hold down the key combination ⌥⌘ firmly while double clicking the library you want to repair and keep holding down the keys.
  • Release the key combination only once you are seeing the dialog asking, if you want to repair the library.


Is your old library perhaps an iPhoto Library and not a Photos Library? If the old libraries are going back twenty years, they might not yet have been migrated to Photos. The last system version being able to repair or migrate iPhoto Libraries has been macOS 12 Monterey. Since then, Photos for Mac can import photos from iPhoto Libraries, but no longer open them for browsing and create Photos Libraries from them.



Nov 8, 2025 7:03 AM in response to Bounder6733

Bounder6733 wrote: …It does reside on an external hard disk, but it's directly connected, not through a network or cloud.

We should ask: How is your external drive formatted? To avoid damaging the Photos Library an external drive must be formatted in either APFS format or Mac OS Extended (Journaled) format. There have been so many problems with using incompatible drives that the newest macOSs won't even allow a Library on a non-Mac formatted drive to open, since there is a chance of damaging the Photos database. See this:

Move your Photos library to save space on your Mac - Apple Support

If this drive is in a an incompatible format, stop running Photos with it immediately!  A Photos Library can sit on an incompatible drive, but running it may corrupt the database.


You can see the Libraries that Photos knows about by closing Photos and option clicking the Photos icon to get this dialog:

This shows the Libraries and their paths, and it indicates which Library is the System Library.



Nov 8, 2025 9:52 AM in response to Bounder6733

If you quit Photos you can just double click on the library of choice to open it. You don't need to go thru the Open pane if you know where the other library is located.


Also if you try to open a library when another library is open you'll get this window;



Most of the time if you click on Switch it will close the current library and open the new one. There are times when it just closes the current library.


This is with Sequoia 15.7.2 on a Mac Mini M4. I'm assuming it's the same with Tahoe.


Photos 11 in Tahoe won't open older Photo Libraries

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