Photoactivation of an electron donor-acceptor encounter complex in an organic solvent cage, a phenomenon that has been described in Mulliken theory, has been known for decades, but it has not been employed as a photoactivation step in the design of photocatalysis for organic synthesis until recent years. We report herein an iododecarboxylation reaction that applies this concept for photoactivation by using a catalyst to facilitate electron transfer and to suppress back electron transfer in the photoexcited state. Under irradiation of 456 nm blue light-emitting diodes, PPh3 catalyzes the iododecarboxylation of aliphatic carboxylic acid-derived N-(acyloxy)phthalimide with lithium iodide as iodine source. The reaction delivers primary, secondary, and bridgehead tertiary alkyl iodides in acetone solvent, and the alkyl iodide products were easily used to generate C-N, CO , C-F, and C-S bonds to allow various decarboxylative transformations without using transition-metal or organic dye-based photocatalysts. This protocol is applicable to redox-active esters derived from various natural products and pharmaceuticals.