You just launched a photo contest on your Facebook Page — “Drop your best shot in the comments to win” — and three followers have already messaged you saying they can’t attach images. Meanwhile, you’re staring at your screen wondering what you broke. You didn’t break anything. Problems with Facebook photo comments are more common than most page owners realize. The “photo comments not allowed on Facebook Page“ error has a handful of specific causes, and every single one has a fix. This guide splits the solution by audience: if you’re the page admin, jump to the admin section. If you’re a follower who can’t attach a photo, skip to the user troubleshooting section. No wading through steps that don’t apply to you.
Before you start clicking through menus, it helps to know which of the four root causes you’re actually dealing with. The fix for a spam flag looks nothing like the fix for a toggled-off admin setting, and confusing the two wastes time. Here’s a quick map of every scenario covered below.
What’s Actually Causing This Error

There are four distinct reasons this error appears, and they affect different people in different ways. Use this table to identify your situation before you do anything else.
| Scenario | Who Sees It | Symptom | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Admin has disabled media in comments | All followers | Photo attachment icon is greyed out or missing entirely | Admin enables the setting (see Section 2) |
| Account flagged for spam behaviour | Specific user only | Error appears on multiple pages, not just one | Wait 24–48 hours; review Community Standards |
| Unsupported file format | Specific user only | Upload starts then fails with a generic error | Convert file to JPEG or PNG |
| App cache or outdated app version | Specific user only | Error appears even on pages that allow photo comments | Clear cache or update the Facebook app |
Fix Photo Comments Not Allowed on Facebook Page (Admin Steps)

If followers across the board can’t attach photos to comments on your page, the setting is almost certainly switched off in your Page settings. Facebook rolled out the New Pages Experience in stages from 2022 onward, so the navigation path differs slightly depending on which version your page is on. Both paths are covered below.
For Pages on the New Pages Experience
- Log in to Facebook and switch into your Page profile by clicking your profile picture in the top-right corner and selecting your Page name.
- From your Page, click the three-dot menu (···) below your cover photo, then select Settings.
- In the left sidebar, click Privacy.
- Scroll down to Page and Tagging. Here you’ll find the control labelled “Who can post on your Page’s timeline?” — set this to Anyone if it isn’t already.
- Directly below that, look for “Allow others to view and leave reactions to posts on your Page?” and confirm it’s enabled.
- For comment-level media specifically, go back to the main Settings menu and click Notifications, then Content Moderation. Confirm that no keyword or media filter is blocking image attachments.
Warning: Facebook’s profanity filter and keyword blocklist can silently suppress photo comments if a filename or alt-text string matches a blocked term. Before assuming the setting is off, check your blocked keywords list under Settings > Privacy > Blocked Words and clear anything overly broad.
For Pages on the Classic Pages Experience
- Go to your Page and click Settings in the top-right menu bar.
- Select General from the left sidebar.
- Find the row labelled Visitor Posts and click Edit.
- Select “Allow visitors to publish posts on the Page” and tick the sub-option “Allow photo and video posts”.
- Click Save Changes.
After saving, test immediately by switching to a personal profile and attempting to attach a photo to a comment on your Page. If it still fails, give it 5–10 minutes — Facebook’s settings can take a short time to propagate.
Once photo comments are working again, the next challenge is getting people to actually use them. These five Facebook post formats are proven to pull real comments fast, and photo contests sit near the top of that list.
Troubleshooting for Followers Who Can’t Attach Photos

If you’re not the page admin and you’re seeing this error, the problem is on your end or with your account — not the page itself. Work through these fixes in order.
Step 1: Check Whether the Problem Is Page-Specific
Try attaching a photo to a comment on a different Facebook Page or in a Group. If it works elsewhere, the page you’re trying to comment on has photo comments disabled — and only that page’s admin can change that. You can check the page’s comment settings transparency by clicking the three dots on any post and selecting “Why am I seeing this?” for context clues, or send the admin a direct message asking them to enable the feature.
Step 2: Verify Your File Format
Facebook accepts JPEG, PNG, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and HEIC for photo comments, but high-resolution RAW files (.CR2, .NEF, .ARW) and some professional formats will be rejected with a generic error message. If you’re pulling a photo straight from a DSLR or mirrorless camera, convert it to JPEG first. On iPhone, go to Settings > Camera > Formats and switch to Most Compatible to avoid HEIC conflicts on older app versions.
Step 3: Clear Your App Cache
A cached permission state can cause Facebook to display the “not allowed” error even after an admin has re-enabled photo comments.
- Android: Go to Settings > Apps > Facebook > Storage > Clear Cache. Do not tap “Clear Data” unless you want to log out.
- iPhone: Offload the app via Settings > General > iPhone Storage > Facebook > Offload App, then reinstall it from the App Store.
- Desktop browser: Press Ctrl + Shift + Delete (Windows) or Cmd + Shift + Delete (Mac) to clear cached images and files, then hard-refresh with Ctrl + F5.
Step 4: Check Your Account Standing
If you’ve posted the same image to several pages within a short window — say, sharing a promotional graphic to 10 pages in under an hour — Facebook’s automated spam detection may have placed a temporary media-upload restriction on your account. This block typically lifts within 24 to 48 hours without any action on your part. You can check your account status at facebook.com/help/contact/1573687642751747 or navigate to Settings > Support Inbox to see if any restrictions have been flagged.
Pro tip: If your account restriction doesn’t lift after 48 hours, submit a review request directly through Facebook’s Help Center > Something Isn’t Working form. Include a screenshot of the exact error message to speed up the review.
Low comment engagement is often a separate but related problem. If your page is getting views but no interaction, this breakdown of why Facebook posts get no comments covers the algorithmic and content reasons in detail.
Keep Photo Comment Engagement High Once It’s Fixed

Fixing the technical error is step one. Getting people to actually drop photos in your comments is a different challenge entirely — and one worth solving if you’re running a business page. A few approaches that work:
- Ask a specific visual question. “Show me your workspace setup” pulls more photo comments than “Share your thoughts.” Specificity removes the friction of deciding what to post. These Facebook hooks are built to spark that kind of reply.
- Run a before/after challenge. Give followers a prompt with a clear visual format — “Before and after your morning routine” — and seed the comments with your own example image first.
- Time your posts strategically. Photo comments require more effort than text replies, so posting when your audience has time to engage matters more than usual. Check the best posting windows for your niche here.
- Respond to every photo comment within the first hour. Facebook’s algorithm weights comment threads that get rapid responses, and replying with a follow-up question keeps the thread active. Here’s how to turn passive likes into active comment threads.
If you’re running paid campaigns alongside your organic content, photo comments on ads follow slightly different rules. This guide on boosting comment rates on Facebook ad campaigns covers the ad-specific settings you need to know.
Frequently Asked Questions
These are the most common questions people ask when hitting the photo comment error on Facebook — answered directly.
Why is the photo attachment icon greyed out in Facebook comments?
A greyed-out attachment icon almost always means the page admin has disabled media in comments. You won’t be able to attach a photo until they re-enable it. If it’s greyed out across all pages, your account may have a temporary media restriction — check your Support Inbox in Facebook Settings.
How do I turn on photo comments on my Facebook Page?
On the New Pages Experience, go to your Page Settings, click Privacy, then Page and Tagging, and ensure visitor posting is set to “Anyone.” On Classic Pages, go to Settings > General > Visitor Posts and enable photo and video posts. Save changes and test from a personal profile.
Why can’t I post a photo in a Facebook comment even though I could yesterday?
This usually points to one of three things: the page admin changed the setting, your app cache is holding a stale permission state, or Facebook’s spam detection flagged recent activity on your account. Clear your app cache first — it’s the fastest fix and resolves the issue in about 70% of these cases.
Does Facebook’s profanity filter block photo comments?
It can, indirectly. If your blocked keywords list under Page Settings is very broad, it may interfere with how Facebook processes comment attachments on certain posts. Review and tighten your blocked words list to only include terms you specifically need to filter.
Can I allow photo comments on some posts but not others?
Not at the individual post level through standard Page settings — the photo comment permission applies page-wide. However, you can disable comments entirely on specific posts by clicking the three-dot menu on a post and selecting “Turn off commenting,” which gives you post-level control even if it’s an all-or-nothing option.
How long does a Facebook media upload restriction last?
Temporary spam-triggered media restrictions typically last 24 to 48 hours. If yours extends beyond 48 hours, submit a review through Facebook’s Help Center using the “Something Isn’t Working” form and include a screenshot of the error.


















