The 10 Best AI Tools for Photo Editing in 2027
Direct Answer
For most people in 2027, the best AI photo editor is Adobe Photoshop with Firefly, which pairs the industry-standard editor with Generative Fill, Generative Expand, and a commercially safe model trained on licensed and public-domain images — starting at $22.99/mo (Photography plan).
If you want serious AI editing without an Adobe subscription, the best value is Photoroom, whose free tier removes backgrounds and cleans up product shots instantly, with a $12.99/mo Pro plan that unlocks batch editing and full-resolution exports. This list is for photographers, e-commerce sellers, social creators, and designers who want one-click background removal, generative object removal, upscaling, and retouching without spending hours masking by hand.
Prices and features below reflect publicly listed 2027 plans.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We scored every tool against six weighted criteria, drawing on G2 and Capterra review averages, official changelogs, and hands-on testing of the same five reference photos (a portrait, a product shot, a low-light scene, an old scanned print, and a cluttered real-estate room).
- Output quality (30%) — how clean generative fill, removals, and upscales look at 100% zoom, judged against visible artifacts and edge halos.
- Ease of use (20%) — how fast a non-expert reaches a usable result; one-click vs. Manual masking.
- Price / value (20%) — real plan cost against what you actually get, including free-tier limits and credit caps.
- Speed (10%) — render time for a typical edit on web and desktop.
- Export & licensing (10%) — file formats, max resolution, watermarks, and commercial-use rights on generated pixels.
- Learning curve (10%) — how much the tool fights you before it helps.
The result is an honest ranking: the most powerful editor isn't always the easiest, and the cheapest pick isn't always the worst.
1. Adobe Photoshop (Firefly) 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Best for: Professional retouching and generative edits | Pricing: $22.99/mo (Photography plan, incl. Lightroom) or $34.49/mo standalone | Platform: desktop (Win/Mac), web, iPad
Photoshop remains the most capable pixel editor on the planet, and Adobe Firefly now lives directly inside it as Generative Fill and Generative Expand, letting you paint a selection, type a prompt, and replace or extend any part of an image in seconds. Firefly's Image Model 4 is trained on Adobe Stock and licensed/public-domain content, so generated pixels carry commercial-use rights that matter for client work.
The Photography plan at $22.99/mo bundles Lightroom, while the standalone app runs $34.49/mo, with generative actions metered as monthly generative credits. Beyond AI, you still get the deepest manual toolset anywhere — layers, masks, frequency separation, Camera Raw, and a vast plugin ecosystem.
It runs natively on Apple Silicon and Windows and exports every format that matters, from PSD to 16-bit TIFF.
Pros:
- Generative Fill and Expand are the most reliable in the industry for matching lighting and grain.
- Commercially safe Firefly model trained on licensed data, reducing legal risk for client work.
- Deepest manual toolset for when AI isn't enough — full layer and masking control.
- Bundles Lightroom in the $22.99 Photography plan for end-to-end raw workflow.
Cons:
- Subscription-only; no perpetual license, and credits can run out on heavy months.
- Steep learning curve for newcomers who just want a quick fix.
Verdict: The most powerful AI editor available, and the safest bet for anyone doing paid or professional work.
2. Adobe Lightroom (AI)
Best for: Photographers organizing and grading large shoots | Pricing: $11.99/mo standalone or included in the $22.99 Photography plan | Platform: desktop, web, mobile (iOS/Android)
Lightroom is built for raw photo grading at scale, and its AI tools have become genuinely time-saving: Generative Remove erases distractions while reconstructing the background, AI Denoise rescues high-ISO night shots, and Adaptive Presets mask skies and subjects automatically.
Masking is AI-driven — click once to select a sky, subject, or background and Lightroom builds the mask for you. The $11.99/mo standalone plan includes 1TB of cloud storage, syncing your full catalog across desktop, web, and phone. It's non-destructive, so every edit stays reversible, and exports support full-resolution JPEG, TIFF, and DNG.
For batch consistency across hundreds of frames, nothing here beats it.
Pros:
- AI Denoise dramatically cleans up high-ISO and night photography.
- Generative Remove and AI masking handle distractions and selective edits in one click.
- 1TB cloud storage included keeps catalogs synced across every device.
- Non-destructive editing preserves originals and supports raw DNG export.
Cons:
- Not a pixel editor — no layers or compositing for heavy retouching.
- Subscription-only and cloud-centric, which not every photographer wants.
Verdict: The best AI tool for photographers who shoot raw in volume and need grading, denoise, and organization in one place.
3. Luminar Neo
Best for: Scenery and portrait creators who want one-click AI looks | Pricing: $14.95/mo subscription or ~$149 one-time license | Platform: desktop (Win/Mac), plugin
Luminar Neo from Skylum is the editor for people who want dramatic results without manual masking. Sky AI replaces and relights skies, Relight AI rebalances foreground and background exposure, and Portrait Bokeh AI adds realistic depth-of-field after the fact. Crucially, Luminar still offers a one-time perpetual license around $149, a rarity in an AI-photo market dominated by subscriptions.
GenErase and GenSwap bring generative removal and replacement powered by an in-house model. It works standalone or as a plugin for Photoshop and Lightroom, and its layer-based engine supports masks and blend modes for finer control. Exports cover JPEG, TIFF, and PNG at full resolution with no watermark.
Pros:
- Perpetual license option (~$149) avoids a forever subscription.
- Sky AI and Relight AI deliver striking results with minimal effort.
- Works as a plugin inside Photoshop and Lightroom workflows.
- Layer support gives more control than most one-click editors.
Cons:
- Can be resource-heavy and slow on older machines.
- Extension packs and add-ons cost extra on top of the base price.
Verdict: The best pick for nature and portrait shooters who want bold AI looks and the option to buy outright.
4. Topaz Photo AI
Best for: Upscaling, sharpening, and noise removal | Pricing: ~$199 one-time (1 year of updates) | Platform: desktop (Win/Mac), plugin
Topaz Photo AI is the specialist that other tools quietly envy for image quality restoration. It combines three of Topaz's best models — upscaling, sharpening, and denoising — into a single autopilot pass that detects faces, recovers detail, and removes noise without the plastic look cheaper upscalers produce.
It can enlarge photos up to 6x while reconstructing realistic texture, making it the go-to for printing small files large or rescuing soft shots. It runs standalone or as a plugin for Photoshop and Lightroom, and the ~$199 one-time price includes a year of model updates with the option to renew.
Output stays full-resolution with no watermark, supporting JPEG, TIFF, and DNG. For raw quality-of-pixels work, it consistently outperforms general editors.
Pros:
- Best-in-class upscaling with realistic texture instead of smeared detail.
- Combined denoise, sharpen, and enlarge in a single one-pass workflow.
- One-time purchase (~$199) with no recurring subscription.
- Plugin support slots it into existing Photoshop and Lightroom pipelines.
Cons:
- Narrow scope — it restores and enlarges, it doesn't compose or retouch.
- Processing is GPU-hungry and slow on integrated graphics.
Verdict: The specialist to own for upscaling and restoration — it does one job better than anything else.
5. Canva (Magic Studio)
Best for: Social creators and teams who design as well as edit | Pricing: Free / $15/mo Canva Pro | Platform: web, desktop, mobile
Canva isn't a pro retoucher, but for fast, good-enough AI photo edits inside a design tool, it's unbeatable on convenience. Magic Studio packs Magic Edit (swap or remove objects via text), Magic Eraser, background removal, and Magic Expand to extend a photo's canvas.
Its Grab and generative tools run on a mix of in-house and partner models, and edits drop straight into posts, decks, and thumbnails without exporting. The free tier handles basic editing, while Canva Pro at $15/mo unlocks background removal, premium content, and brand kits.
Exports cover PNG, JPG, PDF, and even MP4, with team collaboration baked in. For anyone whose photos live in social content, this removes the round-trip to a separate editor.
Pros:
- Background remover and Magic Eraser work in one click for non-designers.
- Edit and design in one place — no exporting between apps.
- Generous free tier covers a lot before you ever pay.
- Team collaboration and brand kits make it strong for marketing teams.
Cons:
- Not a precision retoucher — limited control over fine masking and color.
- Heaviest AI features and most stock content are locked behind Pro.
Verdict: The best choice when your photos feed social posts, decks, and thumbnails and you want editing inside your design tool.
6. Photoroom 💎 BEST VALUE
Best for: E-commerce product photos and bulk background work | Pricing: Free / $12.99/mo Pro | Platform: web, mobile (iOS/Android), API
Photoroom is the value champion because its free tier genuinely works: upload a product shot, get an instant clean cutout, and drop it onto a studio background in seconds. It's purpose-built for e-commerce and resellers, with AI background removal, AI Shadows, batch editing, and one-tap AI Backgrounds that generate realistic studio scenes around your product.
Pro at $12.99/mo adds full-resolution exports, unlimited batch, and removes any export limits, while a REST API lets stores automate thousands of listings. It runs on web and mobile, exports PNG with transparency and JPG, and integrates with Shopify and marketplace workflows.
For sellers who shoot dozens of products, it pays for itself fast.
Pros:
- Free tier removes backgrounds instantly with surprisingly clean edges.
- Batch editing processes whole catalogs at once on Pro.
- AI Backgrounds and AI Shadows create realistic studio scenes automatically.
- API and Shopify integration automate large product workflows.
Cons:
- Free exports are capped at lower resolution with a Photoroom touch.
- Built for product/object shots, less suited to portrait retouching.
Verdict: The best value on the list — a real free tier and the cheapest path to clean, batchable product photos.
7. Picsart
Best for: Mobile-first creative edits and effects | Pricing: Free / $13/mo Gold | Platform: mobile (iOS/Android), web
Picsart is the all-in-one mobile editor for creators who want effects, stickers, and AI in one app. Its AI Replace, AI Remove, AI Enhance, and AI Background tools cover the editing essentials, while generative features can reimagine a whole image from a text prompt.
The free tier is ad-supported and covers most basic edits, with Gold at $13/mo unlocking premium content, no watermarks, and unlimited AI generations. It exports PNG and JPG and offers a huge library of templates, fonts, and overlays, making it strong for TikTok and Instagram creators who edit on a phone.
It's less precise than a desktop editor, but for fast, expressive mobile work it's hard to beat the breadth.
Pros:
- Huge toolkit of AI edits, effects, stickers, and templates in one app.
- Strong mobile experience built for on-the-go social creators.
- AI Enhance and AI Replace handle quick fixes without a computer.
- Large template and overlay library speeds up content creation.
Cons:
- Free version is ad-heavy and applies watermarks to some exports.
- Cluttered interface with constant upsells to Gold.
Verdict: The best mobile-first editor for social creators who want effects and AI in a single phone app.
8. Pixlr
Best for: A free browser-based Photoshop alternative | Pricing: Free / $4.90/mo Premium | Platform: web, mobile, desktop
Pixlr is the lightweight, browser-based editor that gives you layers and AI without an install. Pixlr E offers a Photoshop-like interface with layers and masks, while AI Generative Fill, AI Remove, background removal, and a text-to-image generator handle the AI side.
It's one of the cheapest paid options anywhere — Premium runs just $4.90/mo and removes ads, raises AI credit limits, and unlocks higher-resolution exports. The free tier is ad-supported but still covers a lot, and everything runs in the browser, so it works on low-powered laptops and Chromebooks.
Exports include PNG, JPG, WebP, and PXZ. For a no-cost or near-free editor with real layer support, Pixlr punches well above its price.
Pros:
- Runs entirely in the browser — no install, works on any device.
- Premium at $4.90/mo is among the cheapest paid AI editors available.
- Layers and masks give more control than most free web tools.
- Generative Fill and background removal cover the AI essentials.
Cons:
- AI quality trails Adobe and Topaz on demanding edits.
- Free tier shows ads and caps AI credits.
Verdict: The best near-free browser editor — real layers and AI for the price of a coffee per month.
9. Cleanup.pictures
Best for: Fast, free object and watermark removal | Pricing: Free / from $5/mo (ClipDrop) | Platform: web
Cleanup.pictures, from ClipDrop (now part of Jasper), does one thing brilliantly: remove unwanted objects, people, and text from a photo with a brush and an instant inpaint. There's no account needed to try it — brush over a distraction and the AI reconstructs the background convincingly.
The free tier works at reduced resolution, while a paid plan from around $5/mo (via ClipDrop) unlocks high-resolution output and removes limits. It sits within the broader ClipDrop suite, which adds upscaling, relighting, and background removal. It's web-only and deliberately minimal — there are no layers or color tools — but for quick cleanup before posting or listing, it's the fastest path.
Exports are PNG and JPG.
Pros:
- Instant object and watermark removal with no learning curve.
- No login required to start editing for free.
- Part of the ClipDrop suite for upscaling and relighting too.
- Genuinely free for low-resolution everyday cleanup.
Cons:
- Free output is capped at lower resolution.
- Single-purpose — no layers, color grading, or compositing.
Verdict: The best free pick for quick object and watermark removal when you don't need a full editor.
10. Remini
Best for: Restoring old, blurry, or low-res photos and portraits | Pricing: Free (limited) / from ~$9.99/mo | Platform: mobile (iOS/Android), web
Remini is the photo-restoration and face-enhancement specialist that went viral for rescuing old family pictures. Its AI sharpens blurry faces, repairs scratches on scanned prints, and upscales low-resolution images, reconstructing realistic detail in eyes, skin, and hair.
It's also widely used for AI portrait and headshot generation from a handful of selfies. The free tier is limited by credits and ads, while paid plans start around $9.99/mo for more enhancements and higher-resolution exports. It's primarily a mobile app with a web version, exporting JPG and PNG.
The trade-off is honesty: Remini invents plausible detail rather than recovering true pixels, so restored faces can drift from the original — great for keepsakes, less so for forensic accuracy.
Pros:
- Best-in-class face restoration for old, scanned, or blurry portraits.
- Simple one-tap workflow anyone can use on a phone.
- AI headshot generation from a few selfies as a bonus use-case.
- Free tier lets you test restoration before paying.
Cons:
- It reconstructs (invents) detail, so faces can subtly change identity.
- Free use is credit-limited and ad-heavy.
Verdict: The best tool for reviving old and low-resolution photos — just remember it recreates detail rather than recovering it.
Which One Is Right for You?
What to Look For
- Free vs. Paid: A free tier is only useful if it's not crippled — check resolution caps, watermarks, and credit limits before you rely on one. Photoroom and Pixlr offer the most usable free experiences here.
- Data privacy and training opt-out: Some tools train on your uploads by default. Adobe lets you opt out of content analysis; always check whether your photos feed a model and whether you can turn it off.
- Export and licensing rights: Confirm you actually own the commercial-use rights to AI-generated pixels. Adobe Firefly's licensed training data is the safest for paid client work; many generators leave licensing murky.
- Integration with your stack: If you live in Photoshop or Lightroom, prefer tools with plugin support like Topaz and Luminar; if you sell online, prefer an API and Shopify path like Photoroom.
- Watermarks and output limits: Free tiers often stamp exports or cap resolution. Know the ceiling before you build a workflow on it.
What matters less than the hype: flashy text-to-image demos. For real editing, clean removals, honest upscaling, and reliable masking beat one viral feature every time.
FAQ
What is the best AI tool for photo editing in 2027? Adobe Photoshop with Firefly is the best overall for its combination of Generative Fill, the deepest manual toolset, and a commercially safe AI model. At $22.99/mo the Photography plan also includes Lightroom, covering both retouching and raw grading.
What is the best free AI photo editor? Photoroom has the most genuinely useful free tier for product and background work, while Cleanup.pictures is the best free option for object removal and Pixlr is the best free editor with real layers. Each is usable without paying, with paid plans only removing limits.
Which AI tool is best for upscaling and restoring old photos? Topaz Photo AI (~$199 one-time) is best for general upscaling and noise removal with realistic detail, while Remini is best for restoring blurry faces and old scanned portraits — though Remini reconstructs detail, so faces can change slightly.
Do I own the rights to AI-generated edits? It depends on the tool. Adobe Firefly is trained on licensed and public-domain images and grants commercial-use rights, making it the safest for client work. Many other generators leave licensing ambiguous, so read the terms before using AI pixels commercially.
Can these tools remove backgrounds automatically? Yes. Photoroom, Canva, Picsart, and Pixlr all offer one-click AI background removal, with Photoroom and Canva producing the cleanest edges for product and social work.
Is a subscription required, or can I buy outright? A few tools still sell perpetual licenses: Luminar Neo (~$149) and Topaz Photo AI (~$199) are one-time purchases, while Adobe and most others are subscription-only.
Bottom Line
For 2027, Adobe Photoshop with Firefly ($22.99/mo Photography plan, incl. Lightroom) is the best overall AI photo editor — the most powerful generative and manual tools with commercially safe output. If you want real AI editing for free or close to it, Photoroom (free, $12.99/mo Pro) is the best value, delivering instant background removal and batchable product photos.
Specialists are worth owning too: Topaz Photo AI (~$199) for upscaling and Remini for restoring old portraits. Match the tool to the task and you'll spend less and get cleaner results.
Sources
- Adobe Photoshop — official product and pricing
- Adobe Lightroom — plans and AI features
- Skylum Luminar Neo — features and licensing
- Topaz Photo AI — official site
- Photoroom — pricing and tools
- Canva Magic Studio — AI tools
- Pixlr — AI photo editor
- G2 — AI photo editing software reviews
*AI photo editing tools review — best AI for photo editing, photo editing AI reviews, ratings, best AI photo editor tools 2027, and a review of the top picks.*








