Stop paying designers $50–150 per hour to manually edit product photos—Magic Eraser removes distracting backgrounds, people, text, and unwanted objects in seconds, letting you publish polished listings without the markup.
Magic Eraser uses AI to intelligently remove unwanted elements from your photos without hiring a photo editor. Upload an image, brush over what you want gone, and the tool fills in the gap with realistic background details. It works on product shots, social media content, website banners, and marketing materials. No Photoshop skills required—just point and click.
For small business owners running tight budgets, this cuts editing time from hours to minutes and eliminates the cost of outsourcing photo cleanup. You keep full ownership of your images, process them locally or in the cloud, and maintain brand consistency across all your visual content without bottlenecks.
E-commerce sellers managing large product catalogs (Shopify, Amazon, eBay stores), real estate agents cleaning up listing photos, social media managers removing photobombs or clutter, service-based businesses creating polished website imagery, photographers and creative freelancers streamlining client deliverables, and small marketing agencies handling bulk image editing for multiple clients.
Free tier available with limited monthly removals; Paid plans start at $9.99/month for casual users, scaling to $99+/month for agencies and heavy users. Pay-as-you-go credits also available at roughly $0.50–$2.00 per image depending on complexity.
A small e-commerce business editing 50 product photos per week saves 10–15 hours monthly by eliminating manual Photoshop work—worth $300–600 at contractor rates. Social media managers avoid rescheduling posts due to editing delays, keeping content calendars on track. Real estate agents close deals faster with immediately-ready listing photos. At $10–30/month for most small businesses, Magic Eraser pays for itself in a single batch of outsourced edits you no longer need, while freeing your team to focus on strategy instead of tool clicks.