((new)): Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5.7.1

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5.7.1 is the final update to the fifth major iteration of Adobe’s non-destructive photo editing and management software. Unlike the modern "Lightroom CC" (cloud-native) or "Lightroom Classic," version 5.7.1 was purchased with a one-time fee. You installed it, activated it with a serial key, and it was yours—forever.

| Component | Minimum Requirement | | :--- | :--- | | | Windows 7 SP1 / Windows 8 / Windows 8.1 (64-bit required) macOS 10.7, 10.8, 10.9, 10.10 (Mavericks/Yosemite) | | Processor | 64-bit processor, 2 GHz or faster | | RAM | 2 GB (4 GB recommended) | | Hard Disk Space | 2 GB of available space | | Graphics | 1024x768 display, DirectX 10-capable GPU (for GPU acceleration) |

While primarily a maintenance release, Lightroom 5.7.1 introduced essential support for then-new hardware and critical workflow fixes: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5.7.1

Released in December 2014 as a final stability and camera raw update to the Lightroom 5 series, version 5.7.1 is not just another dot-release. It represents the end of the line for the perpetual license model for Lightroom (before the confusing "Lightroom 6" perpetual debacle). For many photographers, it remains the gold standard of reliability, speed, and functionality without the "living on rent" feeling of modern subscriptions.

Introduced profiles for several lenses to correct distortion and aberrations, including the Canon EF 24-105mm f/3.5-5.6 IS STM Zeiss Distagon T Bug Fixes: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5

When you buy a subscription to Lightroom Classic 2025, you pay roughly $9.99/month (or $120/year). After three years, you have paid $360 and own nothing. If you stop paying, you lose access to your Develop module.

Absolute stability. No background uploads. No subscription nag screens. | Component | Minimum Requirement | | :---

This is tricky. Adobe no longer sells Lightroom 5. They do not host it on their official download servers (links from 2014 are dead).

Included profiles for various Canon, Nikon, Sony, and Zeiss lenses to automatically correct distortion and chromatic aberration.