Free • No signup Edit Multiple photos in bulk · Free

Bulk Photo Editor

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Drop 3 or more photos, type one instruction, and the AI edits every photo in the set — up to 25 at once. Results appear in a grid with before/after for each. 1 credit per photo. Best for product catalogs, real estate listings, car dealership shots, and family archives.

Orange ceramic coffee mug on cluttered wooden table Same mug isolated on clean white background

Upload photo to edit multiple photos in bulk

"Brighten the exposure and fix the white balance so the colors look natural"

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 photos

    Open EditThisPic, then drag and drop a set of photos or use the multi-select file picker. The batch panel opens automatically when 3 or more photos are detected. JPG, PNG, WebP, and HEIC are all supported — formats are converted automatically.

    Expect: Each photo takes roughly 30 seconds. On desktop, two photos run concurrently so a 10-photo batch finishes in about 5 minutes. Note: dropping 2 photos opens the photo + reference compositing flow, not the batch editor — batch starts at 3 photos.
  2. Type one instruction for all of them

    Write a single prompt that describes the edit you want applied to every photo in the set. The same instruction runs on each photo individually — the AI adapts it to each image's content. You don't need to mark areas or select objects; describe the change in plain language.

    Tip: Write prompts that generalize across the whole set. Avoid references to specific objects only one photo has. 'Remove the background and replace it with plain white' works on all product photos; 'remove the red car' only works on one. When photos vary widely, split them into separate batches with tailored prompts.

    Copy one of these to get started:

    Clean white background for product photos Remove the background and replace it with plain white
    Exposure and color fix for mixed-light photos Brighten the exposure and fix the white balance so the colors look natural
    Remove background strangers from vacation photos Remove the strangers in the background and replace them with a natural-looking scene
    Restore and colorize old family photos Restore this old photo: repair scratches, fix fading, and add realistic color
    2 more prompts
    Sky replacement for real estate exterior shots Replace the grey overcast sky with a bright blue sky and soft white clouds
    Sharpen and enhance for catalog quality Sharpen the details, reduce noise, and improve the overall clarity of the photo
  3. Review the results grid

    Each photo appears in a grid with its own before/after toggle. Scroll through the set to verify the edit landed correctly on each one. When you're satisfied, 'Save all' sends every result to your account library at once.

  4. Refine individual photos

    If one photo in the batch needs a different approach, open it individually from the grid and re-run with a more specific prompt. Use the marker tool to draw on a particular area for precision edits. This step is optional — most photos in a well-matched batch need no further work.

See it in action

Orange ceramic coffee mug on cluttered wooden table
Before
->
Same mug isolated on clean white background
After

Product catalog: background removal across 10 items

Ten product photos with varied cluttered backgrounds — one prompt removed each background and replaced it with plain white, ready for an Amazon or Shopify listing.

Prompt: Remove the background and replace it with plain white
House exterior under flat grey overcast sky
Before
->
Same house exterior under vivid blue sky with white clouds
After

Real estate listing: sky replacement across exterior shots

A 15-photo exterior set shot on an overcast day — one sky replacement prompt lifted the whole listing without a single manual selection.

Prompt: Replace the grey overcast sky with a bright blue sky and soft white clouds
Faded black and white 1960s family photo with scratches
Before
->
Same photo restored and colorized with repaired damage and natural colors
After

Family archive: restore and colorize scanned album photos

A box of scanned 1960s prints — faded, scratched, in black and white. One restoration prompt across 20 photos repaired damage and added color to the whole album.

Prompt: Restore this old photo: repair scratches, fix fading, and add realistic color

Quick answers

How many photos can I edit at once?

Up to 25 photos per batch. Drop your files, type one prompt, and the AI edits every photo in the set. If you have more than 25 photos, run a second batch — you can use the same prompt or write a new one.

Does one prompt really edit every photo in the batch?

Yes. You write one instruction and it applies to every photo in the set. Each photo is processed individually so the AI adapts the edit to each image's content — it's not a mechanical filter applied uniformly. If you need different edits on different photos, run them as separate batches.

What does bulk photo editing cost?

Batch editing uses 1 credit per photo. Credit packs: 10 credits for $4.99 · 25 credits for $9.99 (40¢ per photo) · 50 for $17.99 · 100 for $29.99. The checkout screen preselects the smallest pack that covers your batch — a 12-photo batch preselects the pack-25.

Is there a way to try batch editing for nothing?

Your first single-photo edit each week is free — try the edit on one photo before running the batch. Batch runs use credits (1 per photo). This lets you verify the prompt works on your photos before committing to the full batch.

How long does a batch take?

Each photo takes roughly 30 seconds. On desktop, two photos process concurrently, so a 10-photo batch is about 5 minutes and a full 25-photo batch is about 12 minutes. Results appear in the grid as each photo completes — you don't wait for the whole batch to finish before seeing results.

Do I need an account to run a batch?

Yes. Credits attach to your account and results save to your library — both require an account. Sign in with a magic link (no password). Account creation happens automatically at checkout if you don't have one yet.

What photo formats does the bulk editor support?

JPG, PNG, WebP, and HEIC. HEIC files from iPhones are converted automatically — you don't need to convert them before uploading.

What happens if a photo in my batch fails?

Failed photos are refunded automatically — you won't be charged for them. The rest of the batch continues and completes normally. You can then re-upload the failed photo and run it individually.

Can I run different edits on different photos in the same batch?

No — one batch uses one prompt. If you need different edits on different photos, group the photos by edit type and run them as separate batches. For example, run all exterior shots with a sky replacement prompt, then run interior shots with a lighting fix prompt.

Why does dropping 2 photos open a different screen?

Dropping exactly 2 photos opens the photo + reference compositing flow — where the second image guides how to edit the first. Batch editing starts at 3 or more photos. If you want to batch edit just 2, add a third photo to trigger the batch panel.

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 photos in bulk?

Drop 3 or more photos and type one instruction.

1 free edit included·Credit packs from $4.99