Free • No signup Edit Product photos in batch · Free

Batch Edit Product Photos

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Drop 3–25 product photos, type one editing instruction, and the AI applies it across your whole set. Same background treatment, same lighting correction, same cleanup — run once across your catalog instead of photo by photo. One credit per photo; the checkout preselects the pack that covers your batch.

Orange kitchen peeler on cluttered wooden desk with mixed lighting Same orange kitchen peeler on clean white background with soft shadow beneath it

Upload photo to edit product photos in batch

"Brighten the overall lighting, correct the white balance so colors look accurate and neutral, and reduce any yellow or green color cast."

Release to upload

50,000+photos edited
<30stypical edit
1 freeedit weekly

1 free edit·then from $4.99

How it works

  1. Upload 3 or more product photos

    Open EditThisPic and drop or pick 3–25 product photos at once. The file picker is multi-select — hold Shift or Cmd/Ctrl to select the whole set. JPG, PNG, WebP, and HEIC are all supported; HEIC files convert automatically.

    Expect: Each photo processes in roughly 30 seconds; two run concurrently on desktop so a 10-photo batch takes about 5 minutes end to end.
  2. Type one instruction for the whole set

    Write a single editing instruction that describes what every photo in the batch should look like after editing. The AI applies this same direction to each photo individually, adapting to the specific product in each shot.

    Tip: Describe the END LOOK, not the action — 'plain white background, soft diffused shadow under the product, neutral lighting' tells the AI exactly what every photo should become. A style direction generalizes far better across SKUs than a procedural instruction like 'remove the background'.

    Copy one of these to get started:

    Clean white background with shadow Remove the background and replace with plain white. Add a soft, diffused shadow directly under the product to ground it naturally.
    Fix lighting and color accuracy Brighten the overall lighting, correct the white balance so colors look accurate and neutral, and reduce any yellow or green color cast.
    Remove dust, fingerprints, and surface marks Remove any dust, fingerprints, scratches, or smudges from the product surface. Keep the product's natural texture and finish intact.
    Neutral lifestyle background Replace the cluttered background with a clean, light grey studio surface. Keep the product in its original position and orientation.
    2 more prompts
    Enhance and sharpen product detail Increase overall sharpness and clarity, enhance fine surface details, and make the product colors more vivid and true to life.
    Consistent neutral crop and exposure Even out the exposure across the product, lift any underexposed shadows, and slightly increase contrast to make the product pop against the background.
  3. Review the results grid and save all

    Edited photos appear in a grid as each one finishes. Review them side by side to check consistency — same background, same lighting feel, same cleanup across your product line. Click 'Save all' to add the whole set to your account library.

  4. Refine individual photos (optional)

    If one or two photos in the batch came out differently — unusual product shape, reflective surface, very different lighting in the original — click that photo and re-run with a refined prompt. Each re-edit costs one credit.

See it in action

Orange kitchen peeler on cluttered wooden desk with mixed lighting
Before
->
Same orange kitchen peeler on clean white background with soft shadow beneath it
After

Kitchen gadget: cluttered desk to clean white

A bright orange kitchen peeler photographed on a cluttered wooden desk, transformed to a clean white background with a soft product shadow — catalog-ready.

Prompt: Remove the background and replace with plain white. Add a soft, diffused shadow directly under the product.
Hand-painted ceramic mug on windowsill with uneven natural light and window view background
Before
->
Same ceramic mug on clean white background with accurate neutral colors and even lighting
After

Ceramic mug: windowsill to studio white

A hand-painted ceramic mug shot on a windowsill in natural light, cleaned up to a consistent white studio background matching the rest of the seller's Etsy catalog.

Prompt: Replace the background with plain white. Correct the white balance and even out the natural light so colors look accurate and neutral.
Glass skincare serum bottle on crowded bathroom shelf with harsh lighting
Before
->
Same serum bottle isolated on soft light grey studio background with clean professional lighting
After

Skincare product: bathroom shelf to clean gradient

A skincare serum bottle on a crowded bathroom shelf, edited to a soft light grey studio surface for a premium brand look consistent with the rest of the product line.

Prompt: Replace the cluttered background with a clean, light grey studio surface. Keep the product in its original position and orientation.

Quick answers

Will all my product photos come out consistent?

One prompt gives your whole batch the same style direction — same background instruction, same lighting treatment, same cleanup goal — and the AI adapts it to each individual product photo. In practice, photos that started in similar conditions will come out the most uniform. If your set has a wide range of original lighting or product types, some variation is expected. Review the results grid and re-run any outliers individually — each is one credit.

Can I use these edited photos for my Amazon or Etsy listings?

You get the edited photos to use however you like. Each marketplace (Amazon, Etsy, Shopify, eBay) has its own rules about image dimensions, file format, background color, and other technical requirements — those specs are yours to verify and apply. EditThisPic edits the content of the photo; meeting a specific marketplace's technical upload spec is a separate step.

How many product photos can I edit in one batch?

Up to 25 photos per batch. If you have more than 25 products, run another batch — your credits carry over and there's no per-day limit. The buy sheet preselects the pack that covers your batch size, so if you drop 20 photos it will default to the pack-25 option.

Does one prompt apply to every photo in the batch?

Yes — one instruction applies to all photos in the batch. If you need different edits on different products (white background for some, grey background for others), run separate batches with different prompts. There's no per-photo prompt in a single batch run.

What does it cost to batch edit product photos?

1 credit per photo. Packs: 10 credits for $4.99 (50¢/photo), 25 for $9.99 (40¢/photo), 50 for $17.99 (36¢/photo), 100 for $29.99 (30¢/photo). The checkout preselects the pack that covers your batch — drop 15 photos and it defaults to the pack-25. Credits don't expire, so any leftover credits carry over to your next batch.

Is there a way to try it before running a full batch?

Your first single-photo edit each week is free — try the edit on one product photo before running the batch. Batch runs use credits (1 per photo). This lets you verify the prompt works the way you expect on one photo before spending credits on the full catalog.

How long does a batch take?

Roughly 30 seconds per photo, with two photos processing concurrently on desktop. A 10-photo batch takes about 5 minutes; a full 25-photo batch takes around 12–15 minutes. Results appear in the grid progressively as each photo finishes — you don't wait for all 25 before you see any.

Do I need an account to run a batch?

Yes — credits attach to your account, and batch results save to your library so you can download them after. Creating an account is part of the checkout flow when you buy your first pack.

What file formats are supported?

JPG, PNG, WebP, and HEIC. HEIC files (common from iPhone cameras) are converted automatically. Keep file sizes reasonable — very large raw files will process more slowly.

What happens if one photo in the batch fails?

Failed photos are refunded automatically. If 2 out of 15 photos fail to process, you're only charged for the 13 that completed. The rest of the batch finishes normally — a single failure doesn't stop the whole run.

How much does EditThisPic cost?

You get 1 free edit per week — no account needed. After that, credit packs start at $1.99 for 3 edits. Monthly plans start at $4.99/mo for 20 edits with unused credits rolling over. All edits are full resolution with no watermark.

Ready to edit your whole product catalog at once?

One prompt. Up to 25 photos. From 40¢ per photo.

1 free edit included·Credit packs from $4.99