AGE Fotostock favicon

AGE Fotostock

Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
0
/ 100
Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
38
/ 100
Category-Known

What the model believes about AGE Fotostock without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
0
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about AGE Fotostock from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
38/100
Category-Known
Quality?
0.59
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.50
Top associations for AGE Fotostock
image library 3 stock photography agency 3 limited global reach 2 slow customer support 2 lower brand recognition 2 visual content provider 2 licensing flexibility 2 less brand recognition 2 Spanish stock photo agency 2 commercial photography 1 image licensing services 1 editorial and commercial use 1 invoice confusion 1 licensed visual content 1 rights-managed visual content 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
large library of licensed images 2 illustrations and vectors 2 ads and websites 1 licensed content marketplace 1 stock videos 1 large media libraries 1 professional photo licensing 1 content for marketing 1 licensed visual assets 1 stock imagery marketplace 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows AGE Fotostock is firmly in the model's "stock photo marketplace" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is AGE Fotostock known for?
AGE Fotostock is known as a Spanish stock photo agency and image archive, offering rights-managed and royalty-free photography, illustrations, and other visual content to publishers, advertisers, and media companies.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is AGE Fotostock known for?
AGE Fotostock is known as a Spanish stock photo agency and image library, offering editorial and commercial photography, illustrations, and rights-managed/licensed visual content.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best stock photo marketplaces for small businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are best for social media content? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best stock photo marketplaces for blog and website images? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are good for startup marketing? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What stock photo marketplaces are best for ecommerce product marketing? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces have strong business and office photos? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best stock photo marketplaces for authentic lifestyle photos? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are best for global teams needing diverse images? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best stock photo marketplaces for high-resolution downloads? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces work well for presentations and reports? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best stock photo marketplaces for editorial publishing? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are best for creative campaigns? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What stock photo marketplaces are best for nonprofit marketing materials? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are good for healthcare and medical content? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best stock photo marketplaces for real estate listings? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are best for remote work images? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best stock photo marketplaces for seasonal marketing graphics? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are best for technical and technology themes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What stock photo marketplaces are best for diverse and inclusive imagery? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which stock photo marketplaces are best for fast image licensing? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to premium stock photo marketplaces? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which stock photo marketplaces are better than subscription-based image libraries? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to large royalty-free image libraries? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which stock photo marketplaces are better for editorial licensing than generic image libraries? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to high-volume stock image platforms? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which stock photo marketplaces are better for commercial licensing than free image sites? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to budget stock photo libraries? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which stock photo marketplaces are better for curated images than massive libraries? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to enterprise image platforms? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which stock photo marketplaces are better for unique imagery than common stock libraries? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find stock photos that look less generic? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I license images for commercial use legally? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find royalty-free photos for my website? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find editorial photos for news content? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get high-quality photos for marketing without a photographer? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I avoid copyright issues when using stock images? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find images with diverse people for campaigns? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I search for stock photos by industry or theme? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get consistent images for a brand design system? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I download stock photos in the right size for print? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do stock photo marketplaces cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there any free stock photo marketplaces? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest stock photo marketplace? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do stock photo marketplaces offer monthly subscriptions? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there stock photo marketplaces with pay-per-download pricing? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What stock photo marketplaces have free trials? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do commercial stock photo licenses cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which stock photo marketplaces are best value for money? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do stock photo marketplaces have team plans? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Can I buy stock photos without a subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
0/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for commercial use? 0 0/5
Which stock photo marketplaces are most popular right now? 0 0/5
What are the top stock photo marketplaces for businesses? 0 0/5
Which stock photo marketplace has the best selection? 0 0/5
What are the most recommended stock photo marketplaces? 0 0/5
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for editorial images? 0 0/5
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for royalty-free photos? 33,100 0/5
Which stock photo marketplaces do professionals use most? 0 0/5
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for agencies? 0 0/5
Which stock photo marketplace is best overall? 0 0/5
What are the leading stock photo marketplaces for licensing images? 0 0/5
Which stock photo marketplaces have the best quality images? 0 0/5
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for marketing teams? 0 0/5
Which stock photo marketplaces offer the widest variety of photos? 0 0/5
What stock photo marketplaces should I try first? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses

What to do next Recommendations for AGE Fotostock

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Push product-specific content into authoritative sources

The model knows your category but may not name your specific products. Get product-level content into independent reviews, comparison articles, and ranked lists.

+5 to +15 on LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 9:55 PM

All 210 AI responses for AGE Fotostock

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "AGE Fotostock" in the stock photo marketplace category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":6,"justification":"I know AGE Fotostock as a Spanish stock photo agency and have a general sense of its marketplace role, but not detailed, current specifics on products, pricing, or positioning."}
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":4,"justification":"I recognize AGE Fotostock as a stock image provider but know only limited specific details about its offerings or positioning."}
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 5, "justification": "I’m aware AGE Fotostock is a stock photo agency and have some general knowledge of its presence in the market, but I don’t know its offerings or positioning in detail." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 4, "justification": "I recognize AGE Fotostock as a stock photo brand, but I know few specific details about its offerings, positioning, or pricing." }
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I’m aware that AGE Fotostock is a stock photo agency, likely with a stronger presence in Spain/Europe, but I don’t know its current product specifics, pricing, or competitive positioning in depth." }
What is AGE Fotostock known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is known as a Spanish stock photo agency and image archive, offering rights-managed and royalty-free photography, illustrations, and other visual content to publishers, advertisers, and media companies.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is known as a Spanish stock photo agency and image library, offering editorial and commercial photography, illustrations, and rights-managed/licensed visual content.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is known as a stock photography agency and image library, specializing in licensed photos, illustrations, and visual content for editorial and commercial use.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is known as a stock photography and image licensing agency, offering photos, illustrations, and other visual content for editorial and commercial use.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is known as a stock photography agency and image library, especially for licensing editorial, creative, and archival photos.
What are AGE Fotostock's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock’s main strengths are its long-standing experience in stock imagery, its broad and often distinctive editorial archive, and its focus on high-quality visual content from Spain and Latin America. It’s also known for serving professional buyers who need curated, commercial, and editorial material rather than generic stock. Main weaknesses: it is smaller and less dominant than major global competitors, so its library size, global reach, and brand recognition are more limited. Pricing and licensing can also feel less flexible than some newer microstock platforms, and its distribution/market visibility may be narrower outside its core markets.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock’s main strengths are its long-standing presence in stock imagery, a broad editorial and creative catalog, and strong coverage of Spanish/Latin markets and historical/archive content. It’s often valued for niche, localized, and rights-managed material that can be harder to find at larger global agencies. Its weaknesses are typically a smaller scale and lower brand recognition versus giants like Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, or Getty. That can mean less modern self-serve experience, fewer contributors/resources, and less breadth or volume in some commercial categories. Pricing and licensing can also feel less competitive or less transparent than newer subscription-first platforms.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock’s main strengths are its long-standing reputation in the stock-image market, a broad editorial and creative archive, and strong coverage of Spain, Latin America, and European content. It’s also valued for licensing flexibility and access to niche, rights-managed imagery. Main weaknesses: it is smaller and less globally dominant than major competitors, so its library size, search depth, and international brand recognition can be more limited. It may also feel less modern in workflow/tech compared with larger, more automated stock platforms.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock’s main strengths are its large and diverse stock image library, strong editorial and historical content, and broad coverage of Spanish/European subjects that can be harder to find elsewhere. It’s also well known for rights-managed and specialized visual content, which can be valuable for publishers and media. Its main weaknesses are a relatively smaller global brand presence than the biggest international stock agencies, less dominance in broad commercial microstock-style offerings, and a catalog that may feel more specialized than all-purpose for some buyers. Pricing/licensing can also be less straightforward for users used to simpler subscription platforms.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock’s main strengths are its long-standing presence in stock imagery, a broad archive of editorial and creative content, and strong coverage of Spanish and European subjects. It’s also known for serving publishers, media, and brands that need licensing flexibility and niche, localized visuals. Main weaknesses: it’s a smaller player than the biggest global stock platforms, so it may have less breadth, lower brand visibility, and fewer cutting-edge tools or marketplace scale. Pricing and licensing can also feel less streamlined than the largest self-serve stock sites.
Who should use AGE Fotostock? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is best for designers, publishers, advertisers, and content creators who need editorial or commercial stock images, especially if they want a broad image library and are okay working through a licensing-based stock agency. It can also suit businesses looking for rights-cleared visuals for campaigns, websites, and print. People who should avoid it are those who want free images, very low-cost options, ultra-simple subscription pricing, or highly niche/artist-led content with a small boutique feel. If you need fast, casual, unlimited-use visuals without checking licensing terms, a stock agency like AGE Fotostock may not be the right fit.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is best for designers, publishers, marketers, agencies, editors, and businesses that need rights-managed or royalty-free stock images, illustrations, and editorial visuals—especially if they want a broad archive and can work with a traditional stock-agency licensing model. People should avoid it if they need very low-cost or free stock, a super-simple modern subscription workflow, instant “one-price-for-everything” licensing, or if they only want casual personal-use images with minimal licensing complexity. It’s also less ideal for users who want the widest possible creator-community marketplace or heavily trendy UGC-style content.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is best for editors, designers, publishers, agencies, and marketers who need stock photos, illustrations, or historical/archive imagery and want a fairly broad professional library. People should avoid it if they need ultra-budget visuals, very niche modern lifestyle content with a huge creator/community ecosystem, or they want the simplest possible licensing and subscription workflow. It may also be a poor fit for casual users who only need occasional images or who prefer free stock sites.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is best for designers, publishers, advertisers, agencies, and content teams who need licensed editorial or commercial stock images, especially if they want a broad archive and are comfortable working through a traditional stock library. It may be less ideal for casual users, people needing very low-cost or ultra-simple subscriptions, or teams that want a huge modern creator-focused marketplace with lots of trendy user-generated content. If you need easy one-click, cheap, high-volume stock for everyday social content, you may want to look elsewhere.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is best for editors, designers, publishers, advertisers, and content teams who need a stock image library with a broad range of editorial and commercial visuals, especially if they’re comfortable working with a traditional stock-agency model. It may be a poor fit for people who want the cheapest possible images, an ultra-modern self-serve creator platform, or highly specialized niche content that requires lots of free/instant licensing options.
How does AGE Fotostock compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is a smaller, more niche stock-photo agency compared with major competitors like Getty Images, Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, and Alamy. It’s generally stronger in editorial, documentary, and Spanish/European-focused content than in massive global volume. Compared with: - Getty Images: much smaller and less dominant globally, but often more specialized and less expensive. - Shutterstock / Adobe Stock: far smaller library and less platform reach, but can offer more curated or region-specific material. - Alamy: more comparable in being broad and editorial-friendly, though Alamy usually has a larger international footprint. Overall, AGE Fotostock competes more on specialization, curation, and regional expertise than on sheer scale, search tools, or marketplace size.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is generally a smaller, more specialized stock photo agency compared with giants like Getty Images, Shutterstock, and Adobe Stock. Its strengths are often its curated editorial and lifestyle content, Spanish/European focus, and niche collections that can feel more distinctive than the huge, more generic libraries of the largest competitors. It can also be a better fit for buyers looking for rights-managed or more localized imagery. Compared with Alamy, AGE Fotostock is usually more focused and less broad in volume. Compared with Shutterstock or Adobe Stock, it typically has a much smaller catalog, less global reach, and less brand recognition, but potentially more tailored content. Compared with Getty Images, it is far smaller and less dominant in premium editorial and sports/news coverage. In short: AGE Fotostock tends to compete on specialization and curated content, not on sheer scale, pricing power, or marketplace size.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is generally a smaller, more niche stock photo agency compared with giants like Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, Getty Images, and iStock. Its strengths are often its curated editorial and creative imagery, strong European/Spanish-market roots, and more boutique-style licensing service. Compared with the big platforms, it usually has: - Less content volume and global reach - More specialized, curated collections - A less automated, less self-serve user experience - Potentially more personal customer service Against competitors like Alamy, it’s in a similar realm of broad commercial/editorial licensing, but AGE Fotostock is usually viewed as more specialized and regionally focused. Against microstock leaders like Shutterstock/Adobe Stock, it tends to be less competitive on price, scale, and search convenience, but can stand out on editorial depth, unique European content, and licensing flexibility. In short: AGE Fotostock competes best as a boutique, curated alternative rather than a mass-market stock library.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is generally seen as a solid mid-sized stock image agency, especially strong in editorial, historical, and documentary-style content, with a notable European/Spanish footprint. Compared with its main competitors: - vs Getty Images / Shutterstock: much smaller library, reach, and marketing power; less dominant for high-volume commercial searches, but often more specialized and curated. - vs Adobe Stock / iStock: typically less integrated into creative workflows and with a smaller mainstream commercial offering. - vs Alamy: more niche and editorial-heavy in feel; both can be good for hard-to-find imagery, but AGE Fotostock is usually more regionally focused. - vs niche agencies: AGE Fotostock can be competitive on unique regional and editorial content, but it usually lacks the scale, pricing flexibility, and global distribution of the largest players. In short: AGE Fotostock’s main advantage is specialization and regional/editorial strength; its main disadvantage is scale and brand recognition.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
AGE Fotostock is a smaller, more specialized image agency than the big global players. Compared with Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, and Getty Images, it usually has: - a narrower catalog - stronger emphasis on editorial, travel, lifestyle, and documentary-style imagery - more regional/European coverage and a Spanish-market strength - less brand recognition and fewer subscription-scale products Versus Alamy, it’s broadly similar in being a rights-managed/editorial-friendly agency, though AGE Fotostock is generally more niche and less marketplace-driven. Versus iStock or Depositphotos, it tends to feel more curated and agency-like, while those competitors are usually more volume-driven and budget-oriented. In short: AGE Fotostock is best seen as a niche, curated alternative—not as large, cheap, or commercially ubiquitous as the major stock platforms.
What do people typically complain about with AGE Fotostock?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about AGE Fotostock for the usual stock-agency issues: unclear or restrictive licensing, pricing that feels high for the usage rights, customer service that can be slow or hard to reach, and search/results that may be inconsistent or difficult to navigate. Some also mention confusion around downloads, refunds, or invoice/billing details.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about AGE Fotostock’s customer service, licensing/usage terms being confusing, and occasional billing or account support issues. Some also mention the site/search experience feels less smooth than larger stock-photo platforms.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about AGE Fotostock’s licensing being confusing, pricing feeling high or unclear, customer service being slow or hard to reach, and the website/search experience being a bit clunky. Some also mention issues with image availability, refunds, or invoice handling.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain about AGE Fotostock’s licensing and pricing being unclear or restrictive, customer service being slow to respond, and occasional issues with image search/rights management. Some users also mention that stock-photo downloads and account support can be frustrating compared with larger agencies.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People most often complain about AGE Fotostock’s pricing/licensing terms, difficult search or download workflow, and slow or unhelpful customer support. Some also mention image quality consistency, limited metadata, and confusion over usage rights or invoices.
What is a typical stock photo marketplace known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical stock photo marketplace is known for licensed, ready-to-use images, illustrations, and sometimes video or audio that creators and businesses can buy or download for marketing, websites, and publications.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A stock photo marketplace is typically known for licensing ready-made photos, illustrations, and sometimes videos for use in ads, websites, blogs, and other commercial or creative projects.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A stock photo marketplace is typically known for licensing large libraries of professional photos, illustrations, vectors, and sometimes videos that businesses, publishers, and creators can buy or subscribe to for use in marketing, websites, ads, and editorial projects.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical stock photo marketplace is known for offering a large library of licensed images, illustrations, and sometimes videos that creators and businesses can purchase or subscribe to for use in ads, websites, presentations, and other media.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A stock photo marketplace is typically known for offering a large library of licensed images, illustrations, vectors, and sometimes video or music that businesses and creators can buy and use in marketing, websites, and other projects.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best stock photo marketplaces for small businesses? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For small businesses, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** - Best overall for quality and licensing ease - Huge library, strong search, good for marketing assets 2. **Shutterstock** - Best for variety and volume - Great if you need lots of images regularly 3. **iStock by Getty Images** - Good mid-range option - Often better pricing than Getty, solid for small teams 4. **Envato Elements** - Best value if you need more than photos - Includes photos, graphics, templates, fonts, and video on one subscription 5. **Depositphotos** - Budget-friendly and flexible - Good for startups and occasional purchases 6. **Canva Pro** - Best for non-designers - Easy to edit and publish content quickly; includes stock photos inside the design tool 7. **Creative Market** - Best for distinctive, less “stocky” visuals - Good for branding and social media assets **Best pick by need:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best budget value:** Depositphotos or Envato Elements - **Best for easy design workflow:** Canva Pro - **Best for lots of options:** Shutterstock If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **licensing**, or **best for social media/ecommerce/blogs**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most small businesses, I’d shortlist these: - **Adobe Stock** — best all-around if you already use Adobe tools. It offers **750+ million assets**, business/team plans, and **standard asset downloads from $29.99/mo** on an annual plan. Credit packs are also available for irregular needs. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/buy/images?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock** — best for broad selection and team licensing. Its pricing page says it has **500M+ assets** and offers business plans for **up to 10 members** with licensed business use. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — best budget option for on-demand buying. It offers **monthly subscriptions starting at $29/month**, plus credit packs, and its plans page highlights **Essentials** and **Signature** collections. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Envato Elements** — best value if you need lots of visuals, not just photos. It offers **unlimited downloads** with a **lifetime commercial license**; Core starts at **$16.50/month billed annually**. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Unsplash+** — best for a lighter, more design-forward option. It offers **no download cap**, **royalty-free usage**, and **expanded legal protections**; it’s a **single-user license**. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/plus/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Need the safest default?** Adobe Stock. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Need the biggest catalog/team workflows?** Shutterstock. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing/business?utm_source=openai)) - **Need cheapest paid option?** iStock. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Need lots of assets every month?** Envato Elements. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **best-by-use-case table** (social media, ads, website, print, team use).
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for social media content? discovery 720/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for social media content: 1. **Adobe Stock** – best overall for high-quality, modern images and easy licensing. 2. **Shutterstock** – huge library, strong for trendy/social-friendly visuals. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** – good for polished, brand-safe content. 4. **Depositphotos** – budget-friendly with lots of marketing-oriented images. 5. **Envato Elements** – best if you want photos plus templates, graphics, and video for social posts. 6. **Canva Pro** – not a pure stock marketplace, but very convenient for social media creators because it includes stock photos and design tools. Best picks by use: - **Best quality:** Adobe Stock - **Best selection:** Shutterstock - **Best budget:** Depositphotos - **Best all-in-one social design:** Envato Elements / Canva Pro If you want, I can also give you the **best marketplace for Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, or small businesses** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best picks for social media content: - **Adobe Stock** — best overall if you use Creative Cloud; Adobe says its stock assets can be used for social media and are integrated into Creative Cloud workflows. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/content-usage.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock** — best for sheer variety; its social-media searches show huge libraries for social media content, mockups, and templates. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/search/social-media-content?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — good for authentic-looking social visuals; iStock highlights its Signature collection and large social-media-specific library. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photos/social-media?utm_source=openai)) - **Envato Elements** — best for subscription value and bundled social templates; Envato has social-media photo collections and template packs with unlimited downloads under subscription. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/photos/social%2Bmedia?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Need polished marketing graphics + Adobe apps?** Adobe Stock. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/content-usage.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Need lots of options fast?** Shutterstock. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/search/social-media-content?utm_source=openai)) - **Need more “real” lifestyle imagery?** iStock. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photos/social-media?utm_source=openai)) - **Need templates and a subscription deal?** Envato Elements. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/curated-collections/social-media/X_d2qdPpQ7WU_LjJvc0gXQ?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best 3 for Instagram Reels/Stories**, **LinkedIn posts**, or **budget-friendly options**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for blog and website images? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for blog and website images: 1. **Adobe Stock** - Best overall quality and search - Great for commercial blog/website use - Strong selection of photos, vectors, and illustrations 2. **Shutterstock** - Huge library, very reliable - Good for mainstream business, lifestyle, and tech images - Easy to find exactly what you need 3. **iStock by Getty Images** - Good balance of quality and price - Often better for polished editorial/business visuals - Strong premium image collection 4. **Getty Images** - Best for premium, editorial, and high-end brand content - Usually more expensive - Ideal if image quality matters more than cost 5. **Envato Elements** - Best value if you need lots of assets - Flat subscription includes stock photos plus graphics/templates - Great for bloggers and small teams 6. **Depositphotos** - Solid mid-range option - Good selection and frequent discounts - Useful for budget-conscious websites 7. **Canva Pro** - Convenient if you already design in Canva - Easy access to stock photos directly in the editor - Best for quick blog graphics, not deepest library 8. **Pexels / Unsplash** - Free options for simple blog and website use - Great for starter sites and low-budget projects - Less unique, so images may feel common **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best library size:** Shutterstock - **Best value:** Envato Elements - **Best free options:** Pexels and Unsplash If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image quality**, or **best for small business websites**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For blog and website images, my short list would be: - **Best overall paid:** **Adobe Stock** — strong for commercial use, integrates well with Creative Cloud, and offers millions of assets. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/faq.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Best budget-friendly paid:** **iStock** — good value, commercial-use licensing, and a large library. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best premium/curated:** **Stocksy** — exclusive, curated, royalty-free collection; great if you want less “stocky” imagery. ([support.stocksy.com](https://support.stocksy.com/hc/en-us/articles/360050173211-Stocksy-s-Exclusivity-Policy?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for editorial/news-style needs:** **Getty Images** — especially if you need higher-end or editorial content. ([investor.shutterstock.com](https://investor.shutterstock.com/static-files/c9bfbbd0-790d-42ea-8caa-ec2acfb9414f?utm_source=openai)) - **Best free option:** **Unsplash** and **Pexels** — both allow free use for most commercial web/blog projects. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/images/stock/royalty-free?utm_source=openai)) - **Best hybrid/freebie option:** **Dreamstime** — has both paid stock and a free section with public-domain/royalty-free images. ([dreamstime.com](https://www.dreamstime.com/free-photos?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest pick: - **Paying:** Adobe Stock - **Free:** Unsplash - **Most polished premium look:** Stocksy ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/faq.html?utm_source=openai)) Rule of thumb: always check the license for **commercial use**, model/property releases, and whether editorial-only images are excluded from marketing use. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/blog/best-practices/copyright-licensing/stock-photos-image-licensing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **image quality**, or **best for WordPress/blog content**.
Which stock photo marketplaces are good for startup marketing? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good options for startup marketing: - **Shutterstock** — huge library, reliable for ads, landing pages, blog graphics. - **Adobe Stock** — strong quality, easy if your team uses Adobe apps. - **iStock by Getty Images** — good value if you want more “premium” business-looking images. - **Envato Elements** — best if you need photos + templates + graphics on one subscription. - **Depositphotos** — budget-friendly, solid for small teams and quick campaigns. - **Pexels / Unsplash** — free and useful for early-stage content, but less unique. If you want the best general pick: **Adobe Stock** for quality, **Shutterstock** for breadth, **Envato Elements** for startup value. If you want, I can also suggest the best one for **ads, blog posts, pitch decks, or social media**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For startup marketing, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: - **Adobe Stock** — strong if your team already uses Adobe tools; it offers subscriptions and standard assets like photos, vectors, templates, and 3D assets, and you can preview/edit/license in Photoshop. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/Plans?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock** — very large library, good for broad “safe” business marketing needs; Shutterstock says it has **300M+** royalty-free images and plans for small businesses and teams. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/help/en/articles/10617048-where-to-buy-stock-photos?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — good if you want a more curated feel; it offers subscriptions, credits, and plans for photos, illustrations, video, and music, with rollover on unused downloads. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Depositphotos** — often a budget-friendly option; it advertises flexible subscription plans, packs, and custom plans, plus business plans for company/team use. ([depositphotos.com](https://depositphotos.com/subscribe.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Envato Elements** — best if you need more than photos; it’s an unlimited creative subscription with stock photos, templates, video, and a commercial license. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/lp/photos/?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — useful for one-off or broader licensing needs; it offers ready-made licenses including a “marketing package” and also custom licenses. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/licenses-and-pricing.aspx?utm_source=openai)) Quick pick: - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock or Shutterstock. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/Plans?utm_source=openai)) - **Best budget:** Depositphotos. ([depositphotos.com](https://depositphotos.com/subscribe.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for lots of design assets too:** Envato Elements. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/lp/photos/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for premium/curated business visuals:** iStock. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for social ads**, **website hero images**, or **pitch decks**.
What stock photo marketplaces are best for ecommerce product marketing? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for ecommerce product marketing: - **Adobe Stock** — best overall for polished, commercial-ready visuals; strong search and easy Creative Cloud integration. - **Shutterstock** — huge library, great for ad creatives, lifestyle shots, and quick campaign coverage. - **iStock by Getty Images** — good for premium-looking, business/ecommerce imagery at a somewhat lower cost than Getty. - **Getty Images** — best if you need top-tier, high-end brand imagery and can pay more. - **Depositphotos** — solid value for ecommerce teams; good mix of product, lifestyle, and social content. - **Envato Elements** — excellent if you also need templates, mockups, icons, and creative assets beyond photos. - **Freepik** — useful for budget-conscious ecommerce marketing, especially if you want photos plus vectors and mockups. - **Alamy** — good for more niche or editorial-style content, though less ecommerce-focused than the big players. Best picks by use case: - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best volume and variety:** Shutterstock - **Best premium brand look:** Getty Images - **Best value:** Depositphotos - **Best all-in-one creative subscription:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also give you the **best marketplaces specifically for Amazon listings, Shopify ads, or social media product promos**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For ecommerce product marketing, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best overall for teams doing lots of ad creative, product mockups, and social assets. It has a huge library, business/team plans, and commercial licensing with IP indemnification. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/Plans?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Shutterstock** — great all-around choice if you want massive selection and flexible plans for ongoing marketing use. Its standard license covers most digital marketing use cases, while enhanced licensing helps for bigger campaigns. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) 3. **iStock** — strong value pick for ecommerce brands that want commercially safe, royalty-free content and clear licensing for ads, websites, email, and product packaging. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Depositphotos** — good budget-friendly option for volume buying, with business licensing that explicitly covers marketing, product packaging, and web/app use. ([depositphotos.com](https://depositphotos.com/subscribe/corporate/image.html?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best premium:** Adobe Stock - **Best breadth:** Shutterstock - **Best value/simplicity:** iStock - **Best budget:** Depositphotos ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/Plans?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these for **Amazon listings, Shopify banners, paid social ads, or product packaging**.
Which stock photo marketplaces have strong business and office photos? discovery 1,300/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For strong **business and office** stock photos, the best marketplaces are usually: - **Shutterstock** — biggest overall selection; strong corporate, meeting, laptop, team, and workplace scenes. - **Adobe Stock** — very polished, modern business imagery; good for clean, authentic office visuals. - **iStock by Getty Images** — strong curated business content, especially if you want more “real-life” corporate shots. - **Getty Images** — premium, high-end business/editorial-style office imagery; pricier but excellent quality. - **Envato Elements** — good value if you need lots of downloadable business visuals for ongoing use. - **Depositphotos** — broad selection with a lot of standard office and corporate scenes. - **Alamy** — huge library, including more candid and niche business photos. - **Pond5** — better known for video, but also has decent business stock images. If you want the **best mix of quality and variety**, start with: 1. **Adobe Stock** 2. **Shutterstock** 3. **iStock** If you want, I can also suggest the best marketplace for **modern startup-style offices**, **diverse corporate teams**, or **budget-friendly licensing**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best bets for **business + office** photos: - **Adobe Stock** — very strong for office culture, team collaboration, and polished corporate imagery. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock** — huge business/office catalog, including corporate office, team meeting, and workplace scenes. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/search/corporate-office?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — solid, with lots of office meetings, open-plan offices, and business lifestyle shots. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/photos/office?utm_source=openai)) - **Getty Images** — good if you want more premium/commercial corporate visuals. ([gettyimages.fi](https://www.gettyimages.fi/stock-photos/business-and-finance?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image style**, or **subscription value**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for authentic lifestyle photos? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **authentic lifestyle photos** (real people, candid moments, less “posed corporate”), the best stock marketplaces are: 1. **Getty Images / iStock** - Best for: premium, high-quality authentic lifestyle and editorial-feel images - Good if you want: broad selection, strong search, commercial licensing 2. **Adobe Stock** - Best for: clean, modern lifestyle imagery - Good if you want: easy licensing and strong integration with Creative Cloud 3. **Offset by Shutterstock** - Best for: more curated, artful, genuinely natural lifestyle photos - Good if you want: less generic, higher-end visuals 4. **Stocksy** - Best for: the most authentic, candid, human lifestyle photography - Good if you want: natural light, diversity, everyday moments, less “stocky” imagery 5. **Alamy** - Best for: huge variety, including editorial and realistic lifestyle shots - Good if you want: niche scenes and less polished but more genuine content 6. **Pexels / Unsplash** - Best for: free lifestyle images with a casual, authentic feel - Good if you want: budget-friendly options, though licensing/uniqueness is more limited **Best overall for authenticity:** **Stocksy** **Best premium mainstream option:** **Adobe Stock** or **Getty/iStock** **Best curated/artistic option:** **Offset** If you want, I can also give you the **best marketplace by use case** (ads, blog, social media, website hero images, etc.).
retrieval Not mentioned
Best bets for **authentic lifestyle** stock photos: - **Stocksy** — strongest pick for premium, naturally candid lifestyle imagery. It’s 100% exclusive, hand-selected, and explicitly positions itself around “real world”/underrepresented, authentic content; it also does **not** accept AI-generated content. ([share.stocksy.com](https://share.stocksy.com/reflect-the-real-world?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Stock** — good for broad commercial needs; Adobe repeatedly calls out demand for **authentic**, “real people” lifestyle imagery with diverse ages, body types, and backgrounds. ([blog.adobe.com](https://blog.adobe.com/en/publish/2019/04/03/stock-content-call-real-people?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — strong if you want images that feel real and less staged; Alamy says it focuses on “genuine visuals,” “real people, real places and real things,” and does not accept AI-generated imagery. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/creative/?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — useful for lifestyle searches, especially if you want a large library with “authentic” Signature content and more everyday lifestyle subjects. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photos/lifestyle?utm_source=openai)) **Quick ranking:** 1) Stocksy 2) Adobe Stock 3) Alamy 4) iStock If you want, I can also give you the **best marketplace by use case** (brand campaigns, editorial, startup ads, social media, or budget).
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for global teams needing diverse images? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **global teams needing diverse imagery**, the best stock photo marketplaces are: 1. **Shutterstock** - Huge library, strong search, lots of global/culturally diverse content - Good for teams needing coverage across many regions and use cases 2. **Adobe Stock** - Very strong quality control and excellent integration with Adobe tools - Good mix of modern, diverse, business-friendly imagery 3. **Getty Images / iStock** - Best for premium/editorial-quality content and broad international coverage - iStock is the more budget-friendly option 4. **Depositphotos** - Large, affordable library with plenty of diverse, business, and lifestyle assets - Good value for distributed teams 5. **Alamy** - Excellent for hard-to-find, regional, and editorial imagery - Useful when you need authentic local scenes from many countries 6. **Envato Elements** - Best if your team also needs graphics, templates, and video along with photos - Strong for content marketing teams **Best overall picks:** - **Shutterstock** for scale and diversity - **Adobe Stock** for quality and workflow - **Getty/iStock** for premium needs - **Depositphotos** for budget-conscious teams If you want, I can also rank these by **price, diversity, licensing simplicity, or enterprise team features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For global teams, the best stock photo marketplaces for diverse images are usually: - **Adobe Stock** — strong for inclusive, culturally representative imagery and easy workflow if your team already uses Creative Cloud. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pages/artisthub/inclusion?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock / Getty Images** — especially good for curated diversity collections like **Project #ShowUs**, **Disrupt Aging**, and disability-focused sets. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/diversity?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock** — broad library plus dedicated inclusive collections, including its DREAM initiative and other diversity-focused galleries. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/explore/dream?utm_source=openai)) - **Depositphotos** — solid if you want lots of searchable diversity/inclusion results across business, community, and DEI themes. ([depositphotos.com](https://depositphotos.com/photos/diversity-inclusion.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — good for a wide editorial-style range and multicultural coverage. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo/diversity-and-inclusion.html?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best curated diversity collections:** Getty/iStock - **Best broad fallback:** Shutterstock If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **enterprise licensing**, or **quality of diverse representation**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for high-resolution downloads? discovery 260/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best stock photo marketplaces for high-resolution downloads: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for quality and integration with Creative Cloud. Huge selection, strong licensing, lots of high-res files. 2. **Shutterstock** One of the largest libraries. Great for business, editorial, and commercial use, with reliable high-res downloads. 3. **Getty Images** Best for premium, editorial, and high-end commercial imagery. Usually more expensive, but excellent quality. 4. **iStock by Getty Images** A more affordable Getty option. Good mix of standard and premium images, with high-res available. 5. **Depositphotos** Solid budget-friendly choice with flexible subscription and on-demand plans. Good for high-res stock at lower cost. 6. **Dreamstime** Good value and a broad catalog. Often used by small businesses and marketers needing affordable downloads. 7. **Alamy** Excellent for unique, editorial, and niche images. Strong high-res offerings and broad licensing. 8. **Envato Elements** Best if you want unlimited downloads via subscription. Good for creators needing stock photos plus other assets. 9. **123RF** Affordable and straightforward. Decent for everyday marketing needs with high-res files. 10. **Stocksy** Great for curated, artistic, and modern lifestyle photography. Higher quality, less generic imagery. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best premium quality:** Getty Images / Stocksy - **Best budget option:** Depositphotos / 123RF - **Best unlimited subscription:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **license flexibility**, or **best for commercial use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For high-resolution downloads, the strongest all-around marketplaces are: - **Adobe Stock** — best if you want a huge curated library and smooth Creative Cloud workflow; Adobe says it delivers “professional-quality” assets and often provides the original file for best quality. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock** — best for breadth and easy licensing; its help docs recommend downloading the **Large** size, which is the original file from the contributor, and note 300 DPI for images. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/help/en/articles/10617050-what-are-the-image-size-and-formats-available-for-download-on-shutterstock?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — best for a mix of budget and premium imagery; by default it provides the **largest available image size** on download. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/faq/downloading?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — best when you care about file-size details and very large original files; it shows resolution/dimensions on the image page, and for RF or price packages it gives the largest file size available. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/customer/help/file-size.aspx?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Best overall: **Adobe Stock** - Best volume/value: **Shutterstock** - Best premium/editorial feel: **iStock** - Best for maximum file-size transparency: **Alamy** If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **license simplicity**, or **best for commercial use**.
Which stock photo marketplaces work well for presentations and reports? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good options for presentations and reports: - **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong for business/slide-friendly visuals. - **Adobe Stock** — polished, modern images; easy if you use PowerPoint/Creative Cloud. - **iStock by Getty Images** — good quality and more budget-friendly than Getty proper. - **Getty Images** — premium/editorial look, best when you need top-tier credibility. - **Envato Elements** — flat-fee subscription; great for templates + photos together. - **Canva Photos** — very convenient if you build slides in Canva. - **Pexels** / **Unsplash** — free, decent for clean presentation visuals; check usage needs. Best picks for reports/presentations: - **Adobe Stock** for corporate polish - **Shutterstock** for variety - **Envato Elements** if you also need slide templates If you want, I can narrow this down by **budget**, **free vs paid**, or **PowerPoint/Google Slides** use.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good picks for presentations and reports: - **Adobe Stock** — probably the best all-around choice for polished corporate decks and reports. Adobe’s license explicitly allows use in **presentations** and **digital documents/print**, and its catalog has lots of business/presentation/report-style assets. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/license-terms?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — very strong for business imagery. iStock says its standard license covers use in **PowerPoint presentations**, and it has huge results for **presentation** and **report** searches. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/customer-support?utm_source=openai)) - **Unsplash / Unsplash+** — best if you want a simpler, more budget-friendly option. Unsplash’s license allows personal and commercial use, and Unsplash+ is a broader paid license with **no attribution required**. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/blog/unsplashs-api/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Corporate/report-heavy:** Adobe Stock or iStock. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/license-terms?utm_source=openai)) - **Free, clean, modern visuals:** Unsplash. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/blog/unsplashs-api/?utm_source=openai)) - **Need lots of business/data/report imagery:** iStock or Adobe Stock. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/photos/reports?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **license simplicity**, or **quality for annual reports**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for editorial publishing? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **editorial publishing**: 1. **Getty Images** Best overall for major news, politics, sports, celebrities, and high-end editorial coverage. 2. **Reuters Connect** Excellent for fast-breaking news and globally trusted editorial wire photography. 3. **AP Images** Strong for news, politics, and general editorial use with reliable captioning and archival depth. 4. **Alamy** Great for publishers who need broad subject variety, niche editorial images, and more flexible pricing. 5. **AFP Forum** Very good for international news, politics, and cultural/editorial content, especially outside the U.S. 6. **Shutterstock Editorial** Good all-around option for magazines, blogs, and online editorial needs, with easy licensing workflow. 7. **PA Images** Strong for UK and European editorial publishing, especially news and features. 8. **iStock Editorial** More budget-friendly than Getty, useful for digital publishers who need lower-cost editorial images. **Best picks by use case:** - **Top-tier news/editorial:** Getty Images, Reuters Connect, AP Images - **Broadest variety:** Alamy - **Budget-friendly:** Shutterstock Editorial, iStock Editorial - **International coverage:** AFP Forum, PA Images If you want, I can also give you the **best marketplace by region, budget, or license type**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **editorial publishing**, my top picks are: 1. **Reuters Connect** — best for hard-news, breaking-news, and wire-style editorial coverage. Reuters Connect says it lets you license pictures/video or subscribe, with Reuters picture and video content plus archive access. ([reutersconnect.com](https://www.reutersconnect.com/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Alamy** — best all-around for magazines, newsrooms, and feature publishing. Alamy highlights a live news feed, strong editorial filters, and explicitly says it’s ideal for journalists, newsrooms, magazines, and publications. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/editorial/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Shutterstock Editorial** — best for sheer volume and simple licensing. Shutterstock says its editorial collection covers news, sports, entertainment, and archival images, and its editorial license supports print and digital editorial use. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/help/en/articles/10617059-shutterstock-editorial-license?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Adobe Stock Editorial** — best if your team already works in Adobe apps. Adobe’s editorial collection includes Reuters/USA TODAY Sports content, and Adobe Stock exposes an “Editorial” tab in the site UI. ([blog.adobe.com](https://blog.adobe.com/en/publish/2017/06/13/introducing-the-adobe-stock-editorial-collection-uk?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **News/breaking events:** Reuters Connect - **General editorial breadth:** Alamy - **Big library + easy buying:** Shutterstock - **Adobe workflow integration:** Adobe Stock ([reutersconnect.com](https://www.reutersconnect.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-budget** shortlist or a **“best for magazines vs newspapers vs blogs”** version.
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for creative campaigns? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **creative campaigns**, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best overall for polished, modern ad work and easy integration with Creative Cloud. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong for commercial campaign visuals and fast searching. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — best for premium, high-end editorial/commercial looks. 4. **Envato Elements** — great value if you need lots of assets beyond photos, like templates and graphics. 5. **Stocksy** — excellent for more authentic, artistic, less “stocky” campaign imagery. 6. **Offset by Shutterstock** — premium curated content, strong for brand-driven creative concepts. If you want the best choice by use case: - **Most campaign-friendly premium look:** Stocksy, Getty Images - **Best all-around:** Adobe Stock, Shutterstock - **Best budget/value:** Envato Elements, iStock If you want, I can also rank them for **fashion**, **lifestyle**, **B2B**, or **social ads** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **creative campaigns**, my top picks are: 1. **Stocksy** — best for *artful, authentic, less “stocky”* imagery; its collection is curated and 100% exclusive. ([support.stocksy.com](https://support.stocksy.com/hc/en-us/articles/360050173211-Stocksy-s-Exclusivity-Policy?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Getty Images** — best for *premium, high-end campaign visuals* and hard-to-find exclusive content; it offers creative images, vectors, video, and curated collections ready for commercial use. ([gettyimages.com](https://www.gettyimages.com/)) 3. **Adobe Stock** — best if you work in Adobe tools and want *curated, royalty-free assets* for commercial/promo use. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/faq.html?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Shutterstock** — best for *breadth and speed*; it has a huge library and flexible licensing for creative projects. ([investor.shutterstock.com](https://investor.shutterstock.com/node/9446/pdf?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Envato Elements** — best for *budget-friendly campaigns* needing lots of photos plus templates/video/audio under one subscription. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/lp/photos/?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Canva Photos** — best for *fast social and digital campaign production* inside a design workflow, with free and premium stock built in. ([canva.com](https://www.canva.com/pro/stock-photo-subscription?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** - **Premium brand campaign:** Stocksy, Getty Images - **Everyday agency work:** Adobe Stock, Shutterstock - **Low-cost/high-volume content:** Envato, Canva ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/lp/photos/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these for **luxury brands, social ads, or startup campaigns**.
What stock photo marketplaces are best for nonprofit marketing materials? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For nonprofit marketing materials, the best stock photo marketplaces are: 1. **Adobe Stock** - Strong all-around quality, good nonprofit-style imagery, easy licensing. - Best for: annual reports, donor decks, web, social. 2. **Shutterstock** - Huge library, lots of “real people” and community-focused images. - Best for: campaigns, flyers, email banners, quick-turn content. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** - Good balance of price and quality, especially for editorial-looking nonprofit visuals. - Best for: brochures, fundraising materials, presentations. 4. **Getty Images** - Premium, more polished/editorial options. - Best for: major campaigns, press, high-visibility brand materials. 5. **Unsplash** - Free and easy to use, but licensing is more limited and images are widely used. - Best for: blogs, internal materials, simple web graphics. 6. **Pexels** - Free, decent selection, straightforward for small teams. - Best for: social media, website placeholders, low-budget projects. 7. **Envato Elements** - Subscription value is excellent if you also need templates, icons, and design assets. - Best for: nonprofits producing lots of marketing collateral. **Best overall picks for nonprofits:** - **Adobe Stock** for reliability and broad use - **Shutterstock** for variety - **iStock** if you want stronger value on premium images **Tip:** For fundraising and impact storytelling, look for authentic, diverse, documentary-style images rather than overly staged “smiling in front of a laptop” shots. If you want, I can also give you a **best free vs paid shortlist** or **stock sites with the best nonprofit discounts**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For nonprofit marketing, I’d rank them like this: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best if you want a paid library with strong licensing, lots of asset types, and a nonprofit pricing path. Adobe says eligible nonprofits may get discounted or no-cost subscriptions, and Adobe Stock subscriptions cover royalty-free photos, vectors, illustrations, templates, audio, and video. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/enterprise/using/non-profit.html?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Unsplash** — best free option for polished lifestyle/editorial-style images. Unsplash says its library is free under the Unsplash License and includes over 6 million photos and illustrations. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/about?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Pexels** — best free option if you want simple commercial-use licensing. Pexels says all photos and videos are free to use, including for commercial projects, and no attribution is required. ([pexels.com](https://www.pexels.com/license/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Pixabay** — best free option for broader mixed media. Pixabay’s FAQ says you can copy, modify, distribute, and use its stock photos, illustrations, videos, music, GIFs, vectors, and sound effects, even for commercial purposes. ([pixabay.com](https://pixabay.com/service/faq/?utm_source=openai)) **My practical pick:** - **Low budget:** Unsplash + Pexels + Pixabay. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Need brand consistency / more control:** Adobe Stock. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/enterprise/using/non-profit.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best by use case” list** for social posts, annual reports, fundraising appeals, and website hero images.
Which stock photo marketplaces are good for healthcare and medical content? discovery 590/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good stock photo marketplaces for healthcare/medical content: - **Shutterstock** — strong general library; lots of hospital, doctor, patient, anatomy, and pharma visuals. - **Adobe Stock** — good quality and easy licensing; solid for modern healthcare marketing. - **Getty Images / iStock** — especially good for premium editorial-style medical imagery and enterprise needs. - **Alamy** — wide selection, including niche and editorial healthcare content. - **Depositphotos** — budget-friendly with decent healthcare/medical coverage. - **Dreamstime** — useful for affordable standard healthcare imagery. - **Stocksy** — great for more authentic, lifestyle-oriented healthcare visuals. - **Science Photo Library** — one of the best if you need highly specialized medical/scientific imagery. If you want, I can also suggest the best marketplace based on your use case: **hospital marketing, pharma ads, telehealth, medical blog, or textbook/editorial**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good options for healthcare/medical content: - **Shutterstock** — huge healthcare/medical library with dedicated category pages for doctors, hospitals, labs, telemedicine, and medical icons. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/category/healthcare-medical?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Stock** — strong for polished, marketing-friendly medical imagery, with a dedicated “Medical” discovery page and healthcare-focused collection. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/discover/medical?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock / Getty Images** — good for broad healthcare coverage and commercial use, including doctors, nurses, hospitals, and medical technology. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photos/healthcare-and-medicine?utm_source=openai)) - **Depositphotos** — large royalty-free collection with lots of healthcare/medical search pages and business/insurance/clinical themes. ([depositphotos.com](https://depositphotos.com/photos/medical-services.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Stocksy** — better if you want more curated, exclusive, art-forward healthcare imagery. ([support.stocksy.com](https://support.stocksy.com/hc/en-us/articles/360050173211-Stocksy-s-Exclusivity-Policy?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — useful for a wide range of medical/editorial stock and release-ready assets. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/contributors/Alamy-stock-photography-property-release-form.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best quality**, **best budget**, or **best for HIPAA-safe/consent-heavy healthcare marketing**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for real estate listings? discovery 590/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for real estate listings: 1. **Shutterstock** Huge selection, strong search, lots of modern interiors/exteriors. Good for commercial use and easy licensing. 2. **Adobe Stock** Great quality and very usable for property marketing. Strong for polished, editorial-looking real estate images. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** Reliable, broad catalog, often better pricing than Getty proper. Good for agents who need common real estate lifestyle shots. 4. **Getty Images** Premium option for high-end listings and luxury branding. Usually pricier, but quality is top-tier. 5. **Alamy** Massive library with many unique images, including local and architectural shots. Good if you want less “stocky” content. 6. **Depositphotos** Affordable and decent selection for agents and small brokerages. Good budget choice. 7. **Pexels** / **Unsplash** Free, easy to use, and good for marketing graphics or blog content. Less ideal for MLS-style listing images, but useful for supplementary visuals. **Best overall picks:** - **Shutterstock** for variety - **Adobe Stock** for quality - **iStock** for balanced pricing and licensing - **Getty Images** for luxury listings If you want, I can also give you the **best marketplaces specifically for luxury homes, exterior shots, or interior staging photos**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **real estate listing marketing** (social posts, brochures, landing pages), the best stock marketplaces are: 1. **Adobe Stock** — strong for clean, modern real-estate imagery and easy search by category/theme. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/discover/real-estate?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library and very deep real-estate-specific results, including “real estate listing” and related concepts. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/search/real-estate-listing?utm_source=openai)) 3. **iStock** — solid for commercial-use real estate visuals with a very large property-related catalog. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/photos/real-estate-market?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Envato Elements** — especially good if you want lots of real-estate-themed images in one subscription, with dedicated collections for interiors, brokers, property, luxury homes, and more. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/photos/real%2Bestate%2Bindustry?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best selection:** Shutterstock - **Best value for frequent downloads:** Envato Elements - **Best for premium/editorial-style look:** iStock If you want, I can also rank them for **MLS compliance, commercial ads, or luxury listings**.
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for remote work images? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **remote work images**: 1. **Shutterstock** — biggest selection, strong for business/lifestyle remote-work scenes. 2. **Adobe Stock** — great quality and polished corporate/editorial-style images. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — best if you need premium, high-end, more authentic-looking imagery. 4. **Envato Elements** — good value if you need lots of downloads for marketing content. 5. **Stocksy** — excellent for modern, natural, less “stocky” remote-work photos. 6. **Alamy** — huge variety, including more niche or realistic workplace images. 7. **Depositphotos** — solid budget option with decent remote-work coverage. 8. **Pond5** — useful if you also want remote-work **video clips**, not just photos. If you want the **best overall mix**, I’d start with **Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, and Stocksy**. If you want **budget**, try **Depositphotos** or **Envato Elements**. If you want, I can also give you the best marketplaces for **authentic remote team photos vs. staged laptop-at-home images**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best bets for **remote work images**: - **Shutterstock** — probably best for sheer breadth; its remote-work search shows **836,526** royalty-free results. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/search/remote-work?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — strong for lots of remote-work-specific results too, with **825,058** “remote working” images and **778,500+** “remote work” images. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/photos/remote-working?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Stock** — best if you work in Adobe apps; it has a “Working from home” collection and is integrated into Creative Cloud. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/collections/r5c0aVIBhyxmY1IEvmGXsjmdfJPJZ8bp?utm_source=openai)) - **Envato Elements** — good for subscription-based downloading, with dedicated “remote work,” “wfh,” and “remote workers” photo collections. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/photos/wfh?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them for **price, quality, or licensing simplicity**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for seasonal marketing graphics? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for seasonal marketing graphics: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for polished, commercial-ready seasonal visuals. Huge library, strong search, good for ads and social graphics. 2. **Shutterstock** Great for broad selection and quick-turn marketing content. Strong seasonal collections for holidays, retail, and promotions. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** Good for more curated, premium-looking assets. Nice if you want less “generic stock” feel. 4. **Envato Elements** Best value if you need lots of graphics, templates, and stock images in one subscription. Great for seasonal social posts, banners, and email promos. 5. **Depositphotos** Solid budget-friendly option with lots of seasonal marketing imagery and vectors. 6. **Freepik** Excellent for editable seasonal designs, illustrations, and social media creatives. Better if you need design assets, not just photos. 7. **Canva Pro** Very practical for marketers who want ready-to-use seasonal templates plus built-in stock photos and design tools. If you want the strongest picks by use case: - **Best premium:** Adobe Stock - **Best volume:** Shutterstock - **Best all-in-one creative subscription:** Envato Elements - **Best for editable marketing graphics:** Freepik or Canva Pro If you want, I can also rank them for **price**, **licensing**, or **holiday-specific content** like Christmas, Black Friday, and back-to-school.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **seasonal marketing graphics**, my short list is: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best overall for polished, campaign-ready seasonal visuals and timely trend guidance. Adobe publishes seasonal content guides and curated collections for holidays, back-to-school, autumn, etc. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pages/artisthub/get-inspired/seasonal?utm_source=openai)) 2. **iStock** — best for affordable, commercially safe stock photos/vectors with strong seasonal categories and clear royalty-free licensing. It also has large vector libraries, which helps for social posts, ads, and promo graphics. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Envato Elements** — best if you need **graphics + templates** more than just photos. Envato’s stock graphic assets include vectors, icons, backgrounds, and editable design files, and its subscription includes a lifetime commercial license for downloads. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/graphics/stock?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Depositphotos** — best for breadth and fast seasonal browsing. It has very large seasonal photo and vector collections, including “seasonal marketing” vectors and seasonal-stock search pages. ([depositphotos.com](https://depositphotos.com/stock-photos/seasonal.html?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - **Photos + premium feel:** Adobe Stock - **Budget-friendly commercial use:** iStock - **Editable promos/templates:** Envato Elements - **Huge seasonal variety:** Depositphotos ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pages/artisthub/get-inspired/seasonal?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **best for social media ads**, or **best for holiday campaigns**.
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for technical and technology themes? discovery 590/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **technical / technology themes**: 1. **Shutterstock** Huge library, strong coverage of IT, cybersecurity, SaaS, cloud, hardware, manufacturing, and futuristic tech concepts. 2. **Adobe Stock** Very good for clean, corporate tech imagery and vector/illustration assets. Great if you want seamless use in Adobe apps. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Strong editorial-quality and premium commercial tech visuals; good for enterprise, telecom, data centers, and innovation themes. 4. **Envato Elements** Great value if you need lots of assets: photos, icons, mockups, templates, and tech illustrations. 5. **Depositphotos** Solid mid-range option with a broad selection of modern business and technology visuals. 6. **Alamy** Useful for more specific or harder-to-find technical subjects, including industrial and engineering scenes. 7. **Pond5** Best if you also need tech-related video, motion graphics, or footage of devices and systems. If you want the **best overall mix for modern tech marketing**, I’d start with **Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, and Getty/iStock**. If you want, I can also rank them for: - **AI / software / SaaS** - **industrial / engineering** - **cybersecurity** - **budget-friendly options**
retrieval Not mentioned
For **technical/technology themes**, my top picks are: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best all-around for polished tech visuals, especially if you use Adobe apps. It has dedicated tech categories like AI, cybersecurity, fintech, robotics, cloud tech, and generative AI. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/discover/technology?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Shutterstock** — best for sheer breadth. Its tech pages show huge libraries for “technology” and “high tech,” with lots of photos, vectors, illustrations, and 3D assets. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/category/technology?utm_source=openai)) 3. **iStock** — good for cleaner, more curated tech imagery, including an easy-to-search technology collection and a Signature collection. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photos/technology?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Vecteezy** — especially strong for **tech icons, backgrounds, UI-style vectors, and simple concept graphics**. ([vecteezy.com](https://www.vecteezy.com/free-vector/technology?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Alamy** — useful when you want **real-world, editorial-style tech-in-context** images rather than generic “futuristic” stock. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo/technology-in-daily-life.html?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Marketing/product decks:** Adobe Stock or Shutterstock. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/discover/technology?utm_source=openai)) - **Icons, banners, abstract tech backgrounds:** Vecteezy. ([vecteezy.com](https://www.vecteezy.com/free-vector/technology?utm_source=openai)) - **Editorial / real-world tech usage:** Alamy. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo/technology-in-daily-life.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these for **budget**, **licensing strictness**, or **best for AI/cybersecurity/fintech specifically**.
What stock photo marketplaces are best for diverse and inclusive imagery? discovery 20/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for diverse, inclusive imagery: - **Adobe Stock** — huge library, strong search, and lots of modern workplace, family, disability, and LGBTQ+ content. - **Getty Images / iStock** — best for high-quality editorial and commercial diversity coverage; strong “inclusive” collections. - **Shutterstock** — large selection with easy filtering; good breadth across skin tones, body types, ages, and cultures. - **Stocksy** — more authentic, less staged-feeling images; strong representation and lifestyle diversity. - **Alamy** — broad, global collection; good if you want more varied, real-world inclusive imagery. - **TONL** — curated specifically around diversity and multicultural representation. - **Nappy** — excellent for Black and Brown representation, especially for authentic lifestyle and business scenes. - **Offset** — premium, artistic imagery with more thoughtful representation. If you want the **best overall mix of size + diversity**, start with **Adobe Stock, Getty Images, and Shutterstock**. If you want **more authentic, less generic images**, try **Stocksy, TONL, and Nappy**. If you want, I can also give you a shortlist by use case: **business, healthcare, education, or family/lifestyle**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **diverse and inclusive stock imagery**, these are the strongest bets: - **Stocksy** — best for **authentic, curated, less-staged** inclusive imagery. They explicitly position the collection around reflecting “diversity, intersectionality, complexity,” and they’re fully exclusive/curated. ([share.stocksy.com](https://share.stocksy.com/reflect-the-real-world?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Stock** — very solid for **mainstream commercial use** and has explicit D&I efforts plus curated diversity/inclusion collections. ([blog.adobe.com](https://blog.adobe.com/en/publish/2021/06/30/adobe-stock-embracing-diverse-inclusive-imagery-consumers-seek-authenticity?utm_source=openai)) - **Getty Images / iStock** — huge libraries, and Getty’s **Project #ShowUs** was built specifically to improve representation; iStock also has a large “inclusive” category. ([gettyimages.co.uk](https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/showus?utm_source=openai)) - **Nappy** — best if you specifically need **free images of Black and Brown people** with more normal, everyday scenes. ([nappy.co](https://nappy.co/?utm_source=openai)) - **TONL** — strong choice for **ethnically diverse, authentic people imagery**; their mission is centered on closing representation gaps. ([tonl.co](https://tonl.co/llms-info?utm_source=openai)) - **InColorStock** — a good niche option for **inclusive, culturally authentic imagery** from creators of color. ([incolorstock.com](https://www.incolorstock.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Best overall: **Stocksy** - Best mainstream library: **Adobe Stock** - Best giant library with DEI collections: **Getty/iStock** - Best free options: **Nappy** If you want, I can also give you a **“best by use case” list** (business, healthcare, LGBTQ+, disability, Black/AAPI, family, etc.).
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for fast image licensing? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **fast image licensing**, the best stock marketplaces are usually: 1. **Shutterstock** – biggest selection, very fast checkout, clear standard licenses. 2. **Adobe Stock** – great if you already use Adobe apps; easy licensing and quick downloads. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** – strong for editorial/commercial use, fast search and licensing. 4. **Envato Elements** – best if you need lots of assets fast with a subscription model. 5. **Depositphotos** – often cheaper, simple licensing, good for quick turnaround. 6. **Canva Photos** – very fast if you’re already designing in Canva; easy one-click licensing. **Best picks by use case:** - **Fastest all-around:** Shutterstock - **Best for creatives already in Adobe:** Adobe Stock - **Best budget option:** Depositphotos - **Best subscription value:** Envato Elements - **Best for easy design workflow:** Canva If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **license simplicity**, or **best for commercial use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **fast, low-friction image licensing**, my short list is: 1. **Adobe Stock** — very fast if you use Creative Cloud; you can license and download from the site or inside Adobe apps, and it supports instant access across apps. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/faq.html?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Shutterstock** — strong choice for quick one-off buys or subscriptions; their plans are built around immediate download/licensing after purchase. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) 3. **iStock** — simple royalty-free licensing with either credits or subscription, and every download comes with a standard license. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/help/licenses?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Envato Elements** — best if you want “download now, use now” convenience under one subscription with a lifetime commercial license. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/lp/photos/?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall for speed:** **Adobe Stock**. **Best for one-off fast purchases:** **Shutterstock** or **iStock**. **Best for lots of assets under one license:** **Envato Elements**. ([helpx.adobe.com](https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/faq.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best by budget / best by commercial use / best by editorial use”** shortlist.
What are the best alternatives to premium stock photo marketplaces? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives depend on whether you want **cheap, free, or subscription-based** options: ### Good alternatives - **Adobe Stock** — strong quality, easy licensing, great if you already use Adobe apps - **iStock by Getty Images** — often cheaper than Getty, lots of mainstream business imagery - **Depositphotos** — good pricing, flexible credits/subscriptions - **Envato Elements** — excellent value if you also need templates, graphics, video, and fonts - **Canva Pro** — convenient for social/content teams; built-in stock library - **Dreamstime** — decent budget-friendly option with a huge catalog - **123RF** — affordable and broad selection ### Best free options - **Unsplash** — best for polished, modern lifestyle photography - **Pexels** — solid all-around free stock photos and videos - **Pixabay** — broad library, including illustrations and vectors - **Burst by Shopify** — good for ecommerce/business use - **Wikimedia Commons** — useful, but licensing varies a lot ### If you want the cheapest “premium-like” access - **Envato Elements** - **Adobe Stock annual plan** - **Depositphotos subscription** - **123RF credits** ### Quick pick - **Best overall quality:** Adobe Stock - **Best value bundle:** Envato Elements - **Best free:** Unsplash + Pexels - **Best business/ecommerce:** Depositphotos or Burst If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-use-case list** for blog content, ads, ecommerce, or social media.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best alternatives, depending on what you need: - **Pexels** — best for free, simple licensing; free for commercial use, no attribution required. ([pexels.com](https://www.pexels.com/license/?utm_source=openai)) - **Unsplash / Unsplash+** — great for high-quality lifestyle/editorial-style imagery; Unsplash+ adds broader legal protection and a perpetual royalty-free license. ([help.unsplash.com](https://help.unsplash.com/en/articles/6604652-what-is-the-unsplash-license?utm_source=openai)) - **Canva Pro** — best if you want stock photos built into a design workflow; its library includes premium and free content. ([canva.com](https://www.canva.com/pro/stock-photo-subscription?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Stock** — strong “premium marketplace” alternative if you want a subscription model and tight integration with Adobe apps. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/royalty-free/unlimited?utm_source=openai)) - **Stocksy** — best for more curated, artistic, less “generic stock” imagery; it’s a more exclusive marketplace. ([support.stocksy.com](https://support.stocksy.com/hc/en-us/articles/360049641252-Am-I-allowed-to-sell-prints-of-my-Stocksy-content?utm_source=openai)) - **Envato Elements** — good value if you also need templates, graphics, video, and audio alongside photos. ([help.elements.envato.com](https://help.elements.envato.com/hc/en-us/articles/5348875382809-What-is-the-difference-between-Envato-Elements-subscription-and-Envato-Market?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best free option:** Pexels - **Best free premium-looking option:** Unsplash - **Best all-in-one design tool:** Canva Pro - **Best pro subscription alternative:** Adobe Stock - **Best curated/brand-safe feel:** Stocksy If you want, I can also give you the **best alternatives by use case** (blog, ads, ecommerce, startups, or social media).
Which stock photo marketplaces are better than subscription-based image libraries? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **better than subscription libraries** for **quality, uniqueness, or licensing flexibility**, these marketplaces are usually stronger: - **Getty Images / iStock** — best for premium editorial, sports, celebrity, news, and high-end commercial use. - **Alamy** — huge variety, especially editorial, niche, and harder-to-find images. - **Shutterstock** — more of a hybrid, but its on-demand marketplace is often better than many subs for specific one-off needs. - **Adobe Stock** — strong all-around quality and easy licensing, especially for design workflows. - **Getty Images Creative / Offset** — better if you want more distinctive, less “stocky” imagery. - **Stocksy** — excellent for modern, authentic lifestyle imagery; often feels more premium than subscription libraries. - **Pond5** — strong for stock video, but also useful for photos and more flexible licensing. **Best picks by use case:** - **Premium commercial/editorial:** Getty Images, Alamy - **Authentic lifestyle/editorial style:** Stocksy - **Easy design integration:** Adobe Stock - **General one-off buys:** Shutterstock, iStock If you tell me your use case—**blog, ads, editorial, ecommerce, or social media**—I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **one-off buying instead of paying for a subscription**, the best stock-photo marketplaces are usually: - **Stocksy** — best for **curated, premium, more distinctive lifestyle/editorial-looking work**. It’s an artist-owned co-op and **does not offer a typical subscription model**. ([support.stocksy.com](https://support.stocksy.com/hc/en-us/articles/38560860231956-Do-you-Offer-Subscriptions?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — best for **no-subscription buying**. Alamy says it has **“no subscriptions, no credits”** and lets you buy images as single licenses or discounted packs. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/help/licensing-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Pond5** — best if you want a **true marketplace with pay-as-you-go** options, especially if you also need **video, music, or SFX**. Pond5 offers individual purchases, credit packs, and subscriptions, so you’re not locked into a monthly plan. ([pond5.com](https://www.pond5.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) **My short ranking:** 1. **Stocksy** for quality/uniqueness 2. **Alamy** for flexibility and one-off licensing 3. **Pond5** for mixed media and pay-as-you-go If you want, I can also rank them for **best value**, **best quality**, or **best for commercial ads**.
What are the best alternatives to large royalty-free image libraries? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good alternatives to big royalty-free image libraries: 1. **Commissioned custom photography** - Best if you need unique, on-brand images. - Use local photographers or platforms like **Shootday**, **Snappr**, or **Toptal**. 2. **Niche stock sites** - Better quality and less “generic” than huge libraries. - Try **Stocksy**, **Arcangel**, **The License Lab**, or **Offset by Shutterstock**. 3. **Public-domain and museum archives** - Great for historical, editorial, and art use. - Best sources: **The Met Open Access**, **Smithsonian Open Access**, **Library of Congress**, **Europeana**, **Wikimedia Commons**. 4. **Creative Commons image sources** - Useful if you’re okay checking license terms carefully. - Good options: **Flickr Commons**, **Unsplash** (more permissive but still check restrictions), **Pexels**, **Pixabay**. 5. **AI-generated images** - Fastest way to get custom visuals without stock-photo overlap. - Popular tools: **Adobe Firefly**, **Midjourney**, **DALL·E**, **Canva Magic Media**. 6. **Brand-owned/user-generated content** - Best for authenticity, especially for marketing. - Collect with tools like **Bazaarvoice**, **Yotpo**, or **TINT**. If you tell me your use case—marketing, blog, editorial, app UI, or ecommerce—I can narrow this to the best 2–3 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want alternatives to huge royalty-free libraries, the best options are usually: - **Curated boutique agencies** — e.g. **Stocksy** for premium, hand-selected, exclusive imagery. Good when you want stronger art direction and less “stocky” results. ([stocksy.com](https://www.stocksy.com/service/support?utm_source=openai)) - **Free/open-licensed archives** — e.g. **Wikimedia Commons** for free content/public-domain media, and **Pexels** for free commercial-use images under its license. Best for low-cost projects if you’re willing to check license details carefully. ([commons.wikimedia.org](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Public_domain?utm_source=openai)) - **Community photo platforms with licensing** — e.g. **500px**. Better for discovering individual photographers’ work than for browsing a giant generic library. ([support.500px.com](https://support.500px.com/hc/en-us/articles/204728147-500px-Marketplace-Contributor-FAQ?utm_source=openai)) - **Commissioned/custom shoots** — best when you need exact branding, products, people, locations, or message. This avoids the “everyone uses the same image” problem. (This is an inference from the value of exclusive/curated collections and licensing models.) ([stocksy.com](https://www.stocksy.com/service/support?utm_source=openai)) - **Editorial image licensing** — useful for news, entertainment, events, and archival use when commercial stock won’t fit. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing/editorial/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best quality:** Stocksy - **Best free option:** Wikimedia Commons / Pexels - **Best for unique brand visuals:** commission a photographer - **Best for editorial/news:** editorial licensing If you want, I can narrow this to **free**, **budget**, or **premium** options.
Which stock photo marketplaces are better for editorial licensing than generic image libraries? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **editorial licensing**, these are usually better than generic image libraries: - **Alamy** — one of the strongest for newspaper, magazine, and web editorial use; huge archive, especially newsworthy/travel/real-world images. - **Getty Images Editorial** — very strong for high-profile news, sports, entertainment, and celebrity coverage. - **AP Images** — excellent for hard news and historical/news archive content. - **Reuters Connect** — strong for current events, business, politics, and international news. - **AFP Forum** — good global editorial coverage, especially outside the U.S. - **Shutterstock Editorial** — decent all-around editorial collection, often easier to license than pure news agencies. - **Adobe Stock Editorial** — convenient if you already use Adobe, but editorial depth is usually lighter than Alamy/Getty/AP. - **dpa picture alliance** — strong for European news/editorial. - **NurPhoto / SOPA Images** — useful for contemporary news and feature editorial. If you want the **best overall editorial-only choice**, I’d start with: 1. **Alamy** 2. **Getty Images Editorial** 3. **AP Images / Reuters Connect** depending on news focus If you want, I can also rank them by **price, archive depth, or ease of licensing**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **editorial-first licensing**, these are usually better than generic image libraries: - **Reuters Connect** — strongest for breaking news, politics, business, and wire-style reportage. Reuters says it offers editorial content licensing and curated collections for media customers. ([reutersconnect.com](https://www.reutersconnect.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Newscom** — very broad editorial aggregator with content from many publishers, plus news/text stories and fast-changing coverage. ([newscom.com](https://www.newscom.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — good for a mix of editorial and archive, with dedicated editorial sections and “Editorial Only” / “All Uses” licensing. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/editorial/?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock Editorial** — solid if you already use Shutterstock and want a clear editorial-only collection for news, sports, entertainment, and archival imagery. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing/editorial?utm_source=openai)) **Best pick by use case:** - **Fast news / current events:** Reuters Connect - **Broadest editorial search:** Newscom - **Archive + editorial flexibility:** Alamy - **Convenience / one-stop workflow:** Shutterstock Editorial If you want, I can also rank them for **price, rights clarity, or newsroom use**.
What are the best alternatives to high-volume stock image platforms? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want alternatives to big high-volume stock libraries, the best options are usually: ### 1) Premium boutique stock agencies Better curation, less generic content. - **Stocksy** — strong for lifestyle, authentic, modern visuals - **OFFSET by Shutterstock** — premium-feel editorial/commercial imagery - **The Licensing Project** — high-end lifestyle and travel - **Westend61** — clean commercial photography ### 2) Direct creator marketplaces Good if you want more unique work and clearer rights. - **Dissolve** — curated photo/video stock - **Arcangel** — premium editorial and creative imagery - **Alamy** — huge variety, including niche and editorial content - **500px Licensing** — strong for artistic photography ### 3) Subscription stock for teams Useful if you want predictable pricing and lots of downloads. - **Adobe Stock** - **Shutterstock** - **iStock by Getty Images** - **Envato Elements** — especially good if you also need graphics/video/templates ### 4) AI image generators Best when you need custom concepts fast and can accept generated visuals. - **Midjourney** - **Adobe Firefly** - **DALL·E** - **Ideogram** — especially good for text-in-image use cases ### 5) Niche visual libraries Best for specific verticals like nonprofit, diversity, travel, or wellness. - **TONL** — diverse representation - **Nappy** — Black lifestyle imagery - **Death to Stock** — creative, social-friendly assets ### Best pick by use case - **Most premium/authentic:** Stocksy - **Best all-around budget/value:** Adobe Stock or Envato Elements - **Most unique/editorial:** Arcangel or Alamy - **Most flexible/custom:** Midjourney or Adobe Firefly If you want, I can also give you the **best alternatives for photos, videos, or vectors separately**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **alternatives to big, high-volume stock libraries**, the best choices depend on what you value most: - **Best free option:** **Unsplash** — free for commercial use, with a simple license and strong curation. ([help.unsplash.com](https://help.unsplash.com/en/articles/2612315-can-i-use-unsplash-images-for-personal-or-commercial-projects?utm_source=openai)) - **Best free “broad enough” backup:** **Pexels** — free photos/videos, commercial use allowed, no attribution required. ([pexels.com](https://www.pexels.com/license/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best free volume:** **Pixabay** — a large community library with images, video, music, and other media under its content license. ([pixabay.com](https://pixabay.com/music/upbeat-ghostrifter-official-neon-drive-412175/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best paid value for teams:** **Envato Elements** — unlimited downloads, millions of photos, plus templates, video, audio, and more. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/lp/royalty-free-images/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for mixed creative assets:** **Freepik** — one subscription for photos, vectors, illustrations, videos, icons, PSDs, and AI tools. ([freepik.com](https://www.freepik.com/stock?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for premium/licensed business use:** **Adobe Stock** or **iStock** — both emphasize curated, commercial-use stock libraries and licensing. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Budget:** Unsplash / Pexels - **Best overall paid value:** Envato Elements - **Best design-tool ecosystem:** Adobe Stock - **Best for brand-safe premium content:** iStock If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by price**, **top 5 for startups**, or **top 5 for editorial-style images**.
Which stock photo marketplaces are better for commercial licensing than free image sites? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **commercial licensing**, paid stock marketplaces are usually better than free sites because they offer: - clearer license terms - broader indemnification/options - easier proof of rights - fewer “same image everywhere” issues - more reliable model/property releases Good options: - **Adobe Stock** — strong licensing, easy for business use, great integration with Creative Cloud - **Shutterstock** — huge library, solid commercial licensing, good for marketing teams - **Getty Images / iStock** — premium/editorial-quality content, strong rights management - **Alamy** — good for niche, editorial, and commercial needs; broad selection - **Depositphotos** — often cheaper, still better licensing clarity than free sites - **Dreamstime** — budget-friendly commercial stock with straightforward licensing - **Pond5** — especially good if you need stock video, music, or motion graphics too If you want the safest general pick for business use: **Adobe Stock** or **Shutterstock**. Free sites like **Unsplash**, **Pexels**, and **Pixabay** can be fine, but they’re usually less ideal for serious commercial work because license protections are weaker and usage rights can be less predictable. If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **license safety**, or **best for ads/social media/e-commerce**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—if you need **safer commercial licensing**, stock marketplaces are usually better than free image sites. **Good commercial marketplaces:** - **Adobe Stock** — broad commercial use, including advertising/marketing, under its standard license. ([wwwimages2.adobe.com](https://wwwimages2.adobe.com/content/dam/cc/en/legal/servicetou/Adobe_Stock_Additional_Terms_en_US_20200416.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock** — standard license covers personal, business, and commercial uses; it also advertises a **$10,000 legal guarantee**. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/help/licenses?utm_source=openai)) - **Unsplash+** — paid option with a broader commercial license and a legal guarantee, though with some restrictions. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/plus/license?utm_source=openai)) **Why these are better than free sites:** - Free sites like **Pexels** and **Unsplash** do allow commercial use, but they’re more limited in protections and have more usage restrictions. ([pexels.com](https://www.pexels.com/license/?utm_source=openai)) - Free-license sites also often discourage resale, trademark use, or certain sensitive/endorsement uses. ([pexels.com](https://www.pexels.com/license/?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** For a blog or small marketing project, free sites can be fine. For **client work, ads, packaging, or anything high-risk**, use a paid marketplace like **Adobe Stock** or **iStock**. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/help/licenses?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **best stock site by use case** (ads, web, editorial, app, print).
What are the best alternatives to budget stock photo libraries? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **better quality than budget stock libraries**, these are the strongest alternatives: - **Adobe Stock** — best all-around premium option; huge library, strong search, great for commercial use. - **Shutterstock** — massive selection, especially for business, lifestyle, and editorial-style content. - **Getty Images / iStock** — best for premium, high-end, and editorial imagery; pricier but very polished. - **Stocksy** — excellent for authentic, modern, less “stocky” visuals; great for brands wanting a premium look. - **Offset by Shutterstock** — curated, high-end photography; ideal if you want more artistic/editorial work. - **Envato Elements** — best value if you also need templates, video, icons, and graphics alongside photos. - **Canva Pro** — convenient for marketers and small teams; good built-in stock plus easy design workflow. - **Unsplash** / **Pexels** — free, but quality varies; best for lightweight web use, mockups, and quick content. - **Depositphotos** — solid mid-tier alternative with decent pricing and broad commercial coverage. If you want the **best quality-to-price** options, I’d start with: 1. **Adobe Stock** 2. **Stocksy** 3. **Envato Elements** 4. **Shutterstock** If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image quality**, or **licensing safety**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **better alternatives to budget stock libraries**, these are the strongest options: - **Adobe Stock** — best all-around upgrade for teams already in Adobe; it offers subscriptions and credit packs, plus access to photos, vectors, video, templates, 3D, and audio. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Shutterstock** — best for broad selection and flexible buying; it has both packs and subscriptions, including one-time project packs and monthly plans. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Stocksy** — best for more curated, premium-looking imagery; its collection is exclusive and starts at $35 per image, with standard royalty-free licensing. ([support.stocksy.com](https://support.stocksy.com/hc/en-us/articles/38713396680980-How-Much-Does-a-License-Cost-and-What-Does-it-Cover?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — best when you need editorial or business-ready licensing options; it offers multiple license and pricing paths. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/licenses-and-pricing.aspx?utm_source=openai)) - **Envato Elements** — best value if you need lots of creative assets, not just photos; it offers unlimited downloads of creative stock assets under its subscription. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Freepik** — good if you want stock plus AI tools; premium plans include stock access and AI credits, with higher tiers offering unlimited generations. ([freepik.com](https://www.freepik.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Unsplash+** — good for a simpler, modern library; Unsplash+ images come with a commercial license and no attribution requirement. ([unsplash.com](https://unsplash.com/plus/license?utm_source=openai)) **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best premium aesthetic:** Stocksy. ([support.stocksy.com](https://support.stocksy.com/hc/en-us/articles/38713396680980-How-Much-Does-a-License-Cost-and-What-Does-it-Cover?utm_source=openai)) - **Best value for volume:** Envato Elements. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best flexible mainstream option:** Shutterstock. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **the best option for blog posts, ads, ecommerce, or social media**.
Which stock photo marketplaces are better for curated images than massive libraries? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **curated, higher-aesthetic stock** rather than huge generic libraries, these are usually the best bets: - **Stocksy** — probably the strongest for curated, modern, lifestyle/editorial-style imagery. - **Offset (by Shutterstock)** — premium, highly edited collection with a more art-directed feel. - **Arcangel Images** — good for editorial, cinematic, and authentic storytelling images. - **The New York Times Store / NYT Licensing** — strong for documentary/editorial needs, very selective. - **Adobe Stock Premium Collection** — better curated than the main library, though still broad. - **Getty Images Premium Access / Getty Images** — can be curated, especially for editorial and premium commercial use. - **Westend61** — smaller, carefully selected collection with polished commercial imagery. - **Plainpicture** — known for a more tasteful, curated European aesthetic. If your priority is **less volume, more style**, start with: 1. **Stocksy** 2. **Offset** 3. **Arcangel** 4. **Westend61** If you want, I can also rank these by **best for editorial**, **best for lifestyle**, or **best value**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **curated, higher-end stock photos** rather than giant “everything” libraries, I’d start with: - **Stocksy** — probably the best-known curated option; its collection is **100% exclusive, hand-selected, and curated daily**. ([share.stocksy.com](https://share.stocksy.com/curation-services?utm_source=openai)) - **Offset (by Shutterstock)** — a premium, curated collection aimed at higher-end work; Creative Boom describes it as **high-end, curated** imagery. ([creativeboom.com](https://www.creativeboom.com/resources/best-stock-photography-sites-for-creatives-in-2023/?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock Signature** — iStock’s more premium lane, with **exclusive, carefully curated** content. ([stockphotosecrets.com](https://www.stockphotosecrets.com/buyers-guide/exclusive-stock-photos.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Stock premium/curated collections** — still a large library overall, but a better choice if you use its curated sections rather than the full firehose. ([stockphotosecrets.com](https://www.stockphotosecrets.com/buyers-guide/shutterstock-vs-adobe-stock.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want the short version: **Stocksy first, Offset second, iStock Signature third**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best budget-curated options**, or 2. **best curated marketplaces for editorial-style/realistic branding photos**.
What are the best alternatives to enterprise image platforms? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **enterprise image/DAM platforms** like Adobe Experience Manager Assets, Aprimo, or Bynder, the best alternatives are usually: - **Bynder** — strongest all-around DAM for marketing teams; clean UX, good workflows - **Canto** — solid, simpler DAM for mid-market teams; easy rollout - **Cloudinary** — best for developers and dynamic image delivery, transforms, and APIs - **ImageKit** — great Cloudinary alternative; fast CDN + optimization + transformations - **MediaValet** — strong enterprise DAM with Microsoft/Azure-friendly setup - **Brandfolder** — good brand asset management and sharing - **Acquia DAM (Widen)** — mature DAM for larger orgs with complex content needs - **Frontify** — good if you want brand guidelines + DAM in one - **Aprimo** — if you want a broader marketing operations suite, not just images **Quick picks:** - **Best overall DAM:** Bynder - **Best developer-focused option:** Cloudinary or ImageKit - **Best simple team DAM:** Canto - **Best brand portal + DAM:** Frontify - **Best Microsoft-heavy enterprise:** MediaValet If you tell me your use case—**marketing DAM, developer image hosting, e-commerce, or internal asset library**—I can narrow it to the top 3.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **enterprise digital asset management (DAM) / image management platforms**, the strongest alternatives are: - **Cloudinary** — best if you need an **image/video API platform** for apps and websites, with transformation, optimization, and CDN delivery. ([cloudinary.com](https://cloudinary.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Experience Manager Assets** — best for **large enterprises already on Adobe**, with deep governance and content activation. ([business.adobe.com](https://business.adobe.com/products/experience-manager/assets/aem-assets.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Bynder** — best for **brand portals and governed asset distribution** across teams. ([bynder.com](https://www.bynder.com/en/?utm_source=openai)) - **Brandfolder** — best for **easy-to-use enterprise brand asset management** with a strong UX. ([brandfolder.com](https://brandfolder.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Acquia DAM (Widen)** — best for **configurable metadata-heavy DAM workflows** and enterprise content operations. ([capterra.com](https://www.capterra.com/p/76774/Widen-Collective/alternatives/?utm_source=openai)) - **MediaValet** — best for **enterprise DAM with strong support/security** and broad org adoption. ([mediavalet.com](https://www.mediavalet.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Canto** — good for teams wanting a **centralized content hub with AI-powered search**. ([canto.com](https://www.canto.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **OpenText DAM** — solid for **large enterprise information management ecosystems**. ([opentext.com](https://www.opentext.com/products/digital-asset-management?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Apps/web performance:** Cloudinary. ([cloudinary.com](https://cloudinary.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Marketing/brand teams:** Bynder or Brandfolder. ([bynder.com](https://www.bynder.com/en/?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe-heavy enterprise:** AEM Assets. ([business.adobe.com](https://business.adobe.com/products/experience-manager/assets/aem-assets.html?utm_source=openai)) - **General enterprise DAM:** MediaValet or Acquia DAM. ([mediavalet.com](https://www.mediavalet.com/solutions/enterprise-dam?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your use case** (marketing, e-commerce, developer/API, or internal brand library).
Which stock photo marketplaces are better for unique imagery than common stock libraries? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **more unique / less “stocky” imagery** than the big libraries, these are good places to look: - **Stocksy** — probably the best-known for high-end, authentic, less-generic lifestyle imagery. - **Offset** (by Shutterstock) — premium, editorial-feel photography with stronger art direction. - **The Focal Point** — curated, more documentary/editorial work from notable photographers. - **Twenty20** — more natural, creator-driven imagery; often feels less polished and less generic. - **Alamy** — huge collection, including lots of editorial, niche, and unusual content. - **EyeEm** — more modern/experimental aesthetics, depending on contributor pool. - **Adobe Stock Premium / curated collections** — not always “unique,” but the premium sets are noticeably better than standard stock. - **Getty Images / iStock Signature** — strong for editorial and higher-end commercial, though still broad. - **Plainpicture** — more conceptual, European, and art-directed than typical stock. - **Arcangel Images** — better for artistic, cinematic, and contemporary commercial photography. If you mean **most unique overall**, I’d start with: 1. **Stocksy** 2. **Offset** 3. **Alamy** 4. **Plainpicture** If you want, I can also break these down by **best for lifestyle, business, editorial, or abstract/creative imagery**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—if you want **more distinctive, less “generic office smiling at laptop”** imagery, these are usually better bets: - **Stocksy** — probably the strongest choice for unique, art-forward imagery. It’s **100% exclusive**, **human-curated**, and built around content that doesn’t show up everywhere. ([stocksy.com](https://www.stocksy.com/service/support?utm_source=openai)) - **Offset (on Shutterstock)** — a premium, curated collection of **award-winning / assignment-quality** images, positioned above the core stock library. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/help/en/articles/10594970-discover-offset-a-curated-collection-of-premium-images-available-for-download-on-shutterstock?utm_source=openai)) - **Cavan Images** — a premium agency focused on **beautiful, engaging visual content** and curated galleries; good for lifestyle/editorial-adjacent work that feels less stocky. ([cavanimages.com](https://www.cavanimages.com/about?utm_source=openai)) - **TONL** — especially strong if you want **more diverse, representation-forward** imagery than typical mainstream libraries. ([tonl.co](https://tonl.co/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best for ad campaigns**, 2. **best for diversity/authenticity**, or 3. **best budget-friendly alternatives**.
How do I find stock photos that look less generic? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
To find stock photos that feel less generic, look for **editorial-style, candid, and niche-specific** images instead of the usual smiling-office/team-handshake stuff. ### What to search for Use more specific, real-world queries: - **“small business owner packing orders at home”** - **“messy kitchen table laptop work”** - **“doctor reviewing notes with patient”** - **“friends cooking in dim natural light”** - **“remote team video call in home office”** ### Better stock sources Try libraries with more authentic photography: - **Stocksy** — very natural, less staged - **OFFSET by Shutterstock** — more editorial feel - **Adobe Stock** — large selection, good filters - **iStock** — decent for realistic business/lifestyle - **Getty Images** — strongest editorial options, pricier - **Diverse Stock Photo** — good for more inclusive, less-cliché images ### Search tips - Add terms like **“candid,” “natural light,” “editorial,” “documentary,” “unposed,” “lifestyle,”** or **“behind the scenes.”** - Filter out overused styles: **isolated on white**, **smiling at camera**, **perfectly staged office**. - Look for **imperfect details**: clutter, motion blur, mixed lighting, real expressions. ### Best shortcut If you want the least-generic feel, search for: - **editorial photo** - **documentary-style image** - **real people** - **environmental portrait** If you want, I can also give you a list of **search terms for a specific industry** (startup, healthcare, fashion, education, etc.).
retrieval Not mentioned
Look for stock with **specificity** instead of “business people smiling at laptop.” Try: - **Editorial-style stock**: more candid, less staged. - **Niche keywords**: “mechanic hands working,” “small bakery interior,” “older woman gardening at dusk.” - **Local/real context**: city names, weather, seasons, regional details. - **Imperfections**: “messy desk,” “natural light,” “motion blur,” “off-center.” - **Ethnicities/ages/body types**: more varied and believable scenes. Search smarter: - Use **verbs + setting + mood**: `packing boxes in dim warehouse`, `quiet morning kitchen`, `team reviewing printed plans`. - Add **anti-generic terms**: `candid`, `authentic`, `documentary`, `unposed`, `real people`. - Filter out obvious stocky stuff: `isolated on white`, `smiling`, `copy space`, `perfect`. Better sources often feel less generic: - **Adobe Stock** - **Getty Images / iStock** - **Stocksy** (often more natural/editorial) - **Offset** (curated, more distinctive) Best trick: search for **an actual scene**, not a concept. Instead of “success,” search “founder loading supplies into a van at sunrise.” If you want, I can give you a **list of search keywords** for your exact project.
How do I license images for commercial use legally? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
To license images for **commercial use legally**, do this: 1. **Use your own images** Safest option if you took the photo/video yourself and own all rights. 2. **Buy from a reputable stock site** Good options: - **Adobe Stock** - **Shutterstock** - **Getty Images** - **iStock** - **Depositphotos** Check whether the license is **royalty-free** or **rights-managed**: - **Royalty-free** = one purchase, broad use, but not exclusive. - **Rights-managed** = specific use terms, often more limited and expensive. 3. **Get releases when needed** - **Model release** for identifiable people - **Property release** for private property, artwork, trademarks, interiors, etc. 4. **Verify commercial permissions on free sites** - **Unsplash**, **Pexels**, and **Pixabay** can be used commercially, but read the terms carefully. - They’re convenient, but stock sites usually give stronger licensing support. 5. **Use public domain or properly licensed Creative Commons images** - Commercial use is allowed only if the license permits it. - Avoid **CC BY-NC** if you plan to use it commercially. - Keep attribution if required. 6. **Keep proof** Save: - invoice/receipt - license terms - release forms - source URL and download date 7. **Don’t assume web images are free** If it’s on Google Images, social media, or a random website, you usually need permission. If you want, I can give you a **commercial-image licensing checklist** or help you evaluate a specific image/license.
retrieval Not mentioned
In general, to use an image commercially **legally**, you need permission from the copyright owner unless the image is public domain, covered by a license that allows commercial use, or your use fits a legal exception like fair use. The Copyright Office says you can buy/license works, rely on exceptions, or use public-domain works, and it recommends getting permission when there’s doubt. ([copyright.gov](https://copyright.gov/what-is-copyright/?utm_source=openai)) **Practical checklist:** 1. **Identify the source/owner** of the image. 2. **Get a written license** that explicitly allows **commercial use**. 3. **Read the license terms**: attribution, restrictions on editing, distribution limits, territory, term, and whether sublicensing is allowed. ([creativecommons.org](https://creativecommons.org/cc-licenses/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Check for extra rights**: a copyright license may not cover **trademark, publicity/personality, or privacy rights**. That matters for recognizable people, logos, private property, and some branded content. ([creativecommons.org](https://creativecommons.org/faq?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Keep proof**: save the license, invoice, and any releases/permissions. ([copyright.gov](https://www.copyright.gov/engage/photographers/?utm_source=openai)) **Good options for commercial-safe licensing:** - **Creative Commons CC BY / CC BY-SA**: allow commercial use; follow attribution and share-alike rules if applicable. ([creativecommons.org](https://creativecommons.org/cc-licenses/?utm_source=openai)) - **CC BY-NC** licenses: **not** for commercial use. ([creativecommons.org](https://creativecommons.org/cc-licenses/?utm_source=openai)) - **Public domain** images: free to use, but still verify the source and whether any non-copyright rights apply. ([copyright.gov](https://copyright.gov/what-is-copyright/?utm_source=openai)) - **Stock sites**: buy the correct commercial license and keep the receipt/license record. ([copyright.gov](https://copyright.gov/what-is-copyright/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **commercial-image licensing checklist** or help you evaluate a specific image/license.
How do I find royalty-free photos for my website? problem 880/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use reputable stock photo sites that clearly state the license. Good options: - **Unsplash** — free, very popular, easy to use - **Pexels** — free photos and videos - **Pixabay** — free photos, illustrations, and vectors - **Adobe Stock** — paid, high-quality, clear commercial licenses - **Shutterstock** — paid, huge library, reliable licensing - **iStock** — paid, strong for business/marketing use Quick checklist: - Look for **“free for commercial use”** or a clear **royalty-free** license - Check if **attribution is required** - Avoid photos with **logos, trademarks, or recognizable people** unless the license allows it - Save a copy of the license page or screenshot for records If you want, I can also give you the **best free sites for small business websites** or **how to verify a photo’s license in 30 seconds**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Look for photos on sites that offer **clear commercial-use licenses**, such as: - **Unsplash** - **Pexels** - **Pixabay** - **Wikimedia Commons** (check each image’s license carefully) - **Stock sites** like Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, or iStock if you want broader selection Quick checklist: 1. Search by your topic. 2. Open the image’s license terms. 3. Confirm it allows **commercial use**. 4. Check whether **attribution** is required. 5. Avoid images with logos, recognizable people, or branded content unless the license covers it. Good search terms: - “royalty-free [topic] site:unsplash.com” - “commercial use photo [topic]” - “CC0 image [topic]” If you want, I can also give you a **short list of the best free photo sites** or help you find images for a specific theme.
How do I find editorial photos for news content? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use **editorial stock libraries** and wire services. **Best places to search:** - **Getty Images Editorial** - **Reuters Pictures** - **AP Images** - **Alamy Editorial** - **Shutterstock Editorial** - **Adobe Stock Editorial** - **Pond5 News** (for some video/news content) **How to search:** - Use terms like: `editorial`, `news`, `press`, `wire`, `protest`, `election`, `red carpet`, `sport`, `celebrity` - Filter by **Editorial use only** - Search by: - event name - date - location - person/public figure - organization **Important:** - Editorial photos are for **news/reporting**, not ads or marketing. - Check the license carefully; many are **not** usable for commercial promotion. **For free/newsworthy images:** - **Wikimedia Commons** - **government/official press rooms** (White House, NASA, city/state agencies) - **public-domain archives** like the **Library of Congress** If you want, I can give you a short list of the **best sources for breaking news vs. celebrity/newsroom use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use **news/photo agencies and editorial stock libraries**. Good places to find editorial photos: - **Reuters** - **AP Images** - **Getty Images Editorial** - **AFP** - **Alamy Editorial** - **Shutterstock Editorial** - **iStock Editorial** How to search: 1. Search by **event + location + date** Example: `wildfire Los Angeles April 2026 editorial` 2. Filter for **Editorial use only** or **News/Editorial** 3. Check the caption, credit line, and rights info 4. Make sure the photo is licensed for the exact use you need Important: - **Editorial photos are not for ads or promotional use** - If it’s for a news article, blog, or commentary, editorial licensing is usually fine - If you need it for marketing, you’ll need a **commercial license** If you want, I can also give you: - a list of the best free editorial photo sources, or - a workflow for finding and licensing images for a newsroom.
How do I get high-quality photos for marketing without a photographer? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
You can get great marketing photos without hiring a photographer by using a **simple DIY setup + a few reliable tools**. ### Best options 1. **Use your phone** - New iPhones or Samsung Galaxy phones are more than enough. - Shoot in **natural window light** or outdoors in shade. 2. **Add a basic lighting kit** - **Neewer Ring Light Kit** - **Godox LEDP260C** - **Aputure Amaran 100d** (better quality, pricier) 3. **Use a clean background** - **Savage Seamless Paper** - **B&H MyStudio White Vinyl Backdrop** - A simple matte wall can also work 4. **Stabilize shots** - **Joby GorillaPod** - **Manfrotto Compact Action tripod** 5. **Edit professionally** - **Adobe Lightroom** - **Canva** - **VSCO** for quick mobile edits 6. **Use stock photos when needed** - **Shutterstock** - **Adobe Stock** - **iStock** - For more modern-looking options: **Envato Elements** 7. **Try AI image tools for concepts** - **Midjourney** - **Adobe Firefly** - **Canva Magic Media** - Good for mood boards, campaign concepts, and backgrounds ### Quick formula for marketing photos - Bright window light - Plain background - 1–2 props max - Shoot in square and vertical formats - Edit for consistency, not heavy filters ### Easiest “pro-looking” setup - **iPhone 15 / Samsung Galaxy S24** - **Neewer ring light** - **Manfrotto tripod** - **Canva or Lightroom** If you want, I can also give you a **budget setup under $200** or a **product-photo workflow for ecommerce/social media**.
retrieval Not mentioned
You can get very good marketing photos without hiring a photographer by combining **smart DIY, stock, AI, and user-generated content**. ### Best options 1. **Use a smartphone + good light** - Shoot near a window or outdoors in soft light. - Use a clean background. - Keep shots consistent: same angles, same colors, same style. 2. **Buy a few simple tools** - A **tripod** - A **ring light** or softbox - A **plain backdrop** or foam board - This instantly makes photos look more professional. 3. **Use stock photo sites** - Good for lifestyle, office, abstract, and background images. - Try **Adobe Stock**, **Shutterstock**, **iStock**, or **Unsplash** for simpler needs. - Best when you need polished generic visuals fast. 4. **Generate images with AI** - Useful for concept visuals, scenes, mockups, and social media graphics. - Best for ads where the image supports the message rather than shows an exact product. - Be careful with realism and brand accuracy. 5. **Ask customers for photos** - Great for authentic marketing. - Use testimonials, reviews, and real product-in-use images. - Often performs better than polished studio shots. 6. **Create reusable templates** - Make a few layouts in **Canva** or **Adobe Express**. - Then drop in product shots, headlines, and colors. - This keeps your brand looking consistent. ### Simple workflow - Shoot 20–30 basic product shots yourself - Use stock for lifestyle scenes - Use AI for concepts/backgrounds - Use Canva to turn everything into ads, posts, and website banners ### What works best - **E-commerce:** DIY product photos + clean editing - **Service business:** stock + team/headshot-style DIY photos - **Social media:** UGC + AI + templates - **Ads:** strong product photo + bold copy If you want, I can give you a **cheap setup under $100** or a **step-by-step photo plan for your specific business**.
How do I avoid copyright issues when using stock images? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
To avoid copyright issues with stock images: - **Use reputable stock libraries**: e.g. **Adobe Stock**, **Shutterstock**, **Getty Images**, **iStock**, **Envato Elements**, **Unsplash**, **Pexels**. - **Check the license every time**: - **Commercial use allowed?** - **Editorial-only** vs commercial. - **Can you modify it?** - **Any attribution required?** - **Any limits on print runs, ads, merch, or resale?** - **Look for model/property releases** if people, private property, or recognizable brands are in the image. - **Don’t assume “free” means safe**—even free sites can have restrictions. - **Keep proof of purchase/license** and screenshots of the license terms. - **Avoid using images with visible trademarks/logos** unless the license clearly permits it. - **Read usage restrictions** for sensitive uses like: - political campaigns - adult content - health/medical claims - merchandise - templates for resale - **Use AI-generated or public domain images carefully** too—verify rights and source. If you want the safest route, use **Adobe Stock** or **Shutterstock** for commercial projects, and **Unsplash** or **Pexels** for simpler web use, while still checking each image’s terms. If you want, I can give you a **quick checklist** for commercial use vs social media use.
retrieval Not mentioned
To avoid copyright issues with stock images: - **Use images with a real license** from a reputable stock provider, and keep the license receipt/terms. Stock photos are usually copyrighted, so permission comes from the license, not from “finding” the image online. ([copyright.gov](https://www.copyright.gov/engage/docs/photography.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Read the license limits** before use. For example, Adobe Stock’s standard license allows many common uses but has copy/view limits and does **not** allow resale as a standalone product like a mug or t-shirt; extended licenses cover some of those cases. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/license-terms?utm_source=openai)) - **Watch for editorial-only images.** These are generally for news/editorial use, not advertising or other commercial uses. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/help/en/articles/10617090-what-are-stock-photos-for-commercial-use?utm_source=openai)) - **Check for extra rights issues** like people, trademarks, artworks, or recognizable buildings in the photo; the image license may not cover those separately. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/help/en/articles/10617099-how-can-i-ensure-my-business-is-protected-when-using-stock-content?utm_source=openai)) - **Don’t assume “fair use.”** It’s a limited legal doctrine and the Copyright Office says it’s not a substitute for legal advice. ([copyright.gov](https://copyright.gov/fair-use/?utm_source=openai)) - **When in doubt, get written permission or legal advice.** Especially for ads, merchandise, or high-value campaigns. ([copyright.gov](https://copyright.gov/fair-use/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **simple stock-image checklist** you can use before publishing.
How do I find images with diverse people for campaigns? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a mix of **purpose-built stock libraries** and **smart search filters**. ### Best places to search - **Nappy** — strong for authentic Black representation - **TONL** — curated diverse lifestyle/editorial imagery - **Getty Images / iStock** — biggest selection; use diversity-inclusive search terms - **Adobe Stock** — good commercial options and easy filtering - **Shutterstock** — broad catalog, lots of campaign-style photos - **Canva Pro** — convenient for quick campaign mockups, but check quality carefully ### Search tips - Search by **scenario**, not just identity: “women in boardroom,” “family at picnic,” “disabled athlete,” “older couple traveling” - Add specific terms like: - **Black**, **Latino**, **Asian**, **Indigenous** - **plus size**, **wheelchair user**, **LGBTQ+**, **older adults**, **mixed race** - Look for **real variety** in: - skin tones, ages, body types, hair textures, disabilities, gender expression ### Quality checklist - Does it feel **natural**, not staged? - Are people shown in **roles of authority, joy, family, and everyday life**? - Do images avoid stereotypes? - Do you have **commercial usage rights**? ### Best practice If the campaign matters a lot, consider hiring a photographer and casting a **real, diverse group** instead of relying only on stock. If you want, I can also give you a **ready-to-use search keyword list** for your specific campaign.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use **inclusive stock libraries** and search with specific intent. **Good places to look** - **Getty Images** - **Shutterstock** - **Adobe Stock** - **iStock** - **Diverse stock-specific sites** like **TONL**, **Nappy**, **Pexels**, **Unsplash** **Search tips** - Search by **real-life context**, not just demographics: “team meeting”, “family dinner”, “older adult exercising”, “disabled entrepreneur”, “Black professionals”, “interracial couple” - Add terms like: - **authentic** - **candid** - **natural light** - **everyday** - **inclusive** - Avoid overly staged “diversity stock photo” looks. **What to check** - Representation across **race, age, body type, disability, gender expression, and family structure** - Whether people are shown in **roles of authority, joy, expertise, and normal life** - If the image feels **tokenistic** or stereotyped **Best practice** Build a **campaign image library** with a mix of: - candid lifestyle shots - professional/team scenes - close-ups and portraiture - different regions/cultures relevant to your audience If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **search keyword list**, or 2. a **shortlist of the best inclusive photo sites** for marketing.
How do I search for stock photos by industry or theme? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use stock sites that support **category + keyword + filters**. **Good sites:** - **Shutterstock** - **Adobe Stock** - **iStock by Getty Images** - **Unsplash** (more editorial/natural, less “industry” focused) **How to search:** 1. Start with a **broad theme**: - “healthcare team” - “small business office” - “manufacturing plant” - “technology meeting” 2. Add **industry keywords**: - finance, education, real estate, hospitality, construction, legal 3. Use **filters**: - orientation, color, people count, copy space, location, style 4. Search by **concepts**, not just objects: - “leadership,” “teamwork,” “innovation,” “customer service,” “sustainability” 5. Try combining terms: - “diverse team in office” - “nurse and patient consultation” - “warehouse logistics” **Tip:** On **Adobe Stock** and **Shutterstock**, their built-in categories and visual similarity tools are especially useful for narrowing by theme. If you want, I can give you a list of **best search terms by industry**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use **industry + subject + style + mood** keywords. ### Formula **[industry] + [scene/theme] + [style] + [format]** ### Examples - **healthcare team meeting stock photo** - **fintech app dashboard office stock photo** - **real estate family home exterior stock photo** - **restaurant kitchen close-up stock photo** - **manufacturing warehouse worker stock photo** - **small business owner packaging products stock photo** ### Add modifiers for better results - **Demographics:** diverse, young, senior, female-led - **Mood:** candid, professional, bright, moody, premium - **Setting:** office, studio, outdoor, hospital, workshop - **Composition:** horizontal, vertical, copy space, close-up, wide shot ### Theme-based searches - **teamwork** - **remote work** - **sustainability** - **innovation** - **customer service** - **digital transformation** - **wellness** - **leadership** ### Tips - Search with **industry synonyms**: “legal” = lawyer, courtroom, contract, compliance - Use **negative keywords** if supported: `-illustration -vector` - Try **site filters** or built-in categories on stock sites like **Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, iStock, Getty Images, Unsplash** If you want, I can give you a **keyword list for a specific industry**.
How do I get consistent images for a brand design system? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
To keep images consistent in a brand design system, build a **repeatable image system**, not just a style guide. ### 1) Define the image rules Lock these down: - **Subject matter**: what you show / never show - **Mood**: e.g. premium, friendly, clinical - **Color palette**: exact hex colors - **Lighting**: soft daylight, high contrast, etc. - **Composition**: centered, negative space, close-up, etc. - **Crop ratio**: 1:1, 4:5, 16:9 - **Treatment**: photo, illustration, 3D, cutout, grain, blur ### 2) Create a visual reference library Use 10–20 approved examples as the “source of truth.” Good tools: - **Figma** for mood boards and system docs - **Notion** for image rules + examples - **Bynder** or **Frontify** for asset management and approvals ### 3) Use templates for every image type Make reusable templates for: - Social posts - Hero banners - Product shots - Icons/illustrations - AI image prompts ### 4) If using AI, standardize prompts Keep one prompt structure: - style - subject - lighting - color - composition - exclusions Example: > “Minimal premium product photo of a skincare bottle on warm neutral background, soft studio lighting, centered composition, subtle shadow, clean modern aesthetic, no hands, no text, no clutter.” For consistency, use: - **Midjourney** - **Adobe Firefly** - **DALL·E** ### 5) Control the editing process Even good images drift unless you standardize: - one preset in **Adobe Lightroom** - one filter style in **Photoshop** - fixed export settings and aspect ratios ### 6) Document do’s and don’ts Include: - approved examples - forbidden colors, angles, props, filters - typography placement rules - spacing rules around images ### 7) Build approval gates Have a single reviewer or brand owner approve new visuals before they’re added to the system. If you want, I can give you a **one-page image style guide template** or an **AI prompt framework** for your brand.
retrieval Not mentioned
To get consistent images in a brand design system: - **Define a visual style guide**: color palette, lighting, composition, subject matter, backgrounds, cropping. - **Create image rules**: do/don’t examples for photography, illustration, icons, and AI images. - **Use templates**: fixed layouts for social, web, ads, and docs. - **Standardize editing**: same filters, contrast, grain, shadow treatment, aspect ratios. - **Limit sources**: use a small set of photographers, illustrators, or tools. - **Build an asset library**: approved images, prompts, presets, and crops. - **Add governance**: one owner reviews all new images for fit. - **Document edge cases**: what to do for seasonal campaigns, product shots, and portraits. If you want, I can turn this into a **brand image style guide template**.
How do I download stock photos in the right size for print? problem 30/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
To download stock photos at the right size for print: 1. **Find your print size** - Example: 4x6, 8x10, A4, poster, etc. 2. **Match resolution** - For good print quality, use **300 DPI/PPI**. - Required pixels = **inches × 300** - Examples: - **4x6"** → **1200 x 1800 px** - **8x10"** → **2400 x 3000 px** - **11x14"** → **3300 x 4200 px** 3. **Choose a large-enough stock image** - On sites like **Adobe Stock**, **Shutterstock**, and **iStock**, check the **download size / dimensions** before buying. - Make sure the file is at least as large as your print needs. 4. **Download the original/full-size file** - Don’t grab the “web” or “small” version. - Prefer **JPEG** or **TIFF** for print. 5. **Check in print software** - In **Adobe Photoshop** or **Canva**, verify the image still shows around **300 PPI** at the final print size. - If it’s lower, it may print blurry. Quick rule: - **300 PPI = best** - **240 PPI = usually okay** - **Below 200 PPI = risky for print** If you want, I can give you a **print-size chart** for common sizes like 5x7, 8x10, and poster sizes.
retrieval Not mentioned
To get stock photos in the right size for print: 1. **Check the final print size** - Example: 8x10 in, 11x14 in, poster, brochure, etc. 2. **Use print resolution** - Aim for **300 DPI** for most print work. - Formula: **pixels needed = inches × 300** - Example: **8x10 in → 2400 x 3000 px** 3. **Choose a stock image with enough pixels** - On the stock site, look for the image’s **dimensions** or **“large”/“original”** download option. - Make sure the pixel size meets or exceeds your target. 4. **Download the highest available size** - Most stock sites offer sizes like small/medium/large/original. - For print, pick **largest/original** unless the site gives exact dimensions you need. 5. **Leave room for cropping** - If you need to crop the image, download something **larger than required** so you don’t lose quality. 6. **Avoid upscaling when possible** - Enlarging a small image can make it blurry in print. If you want, I can also give you: - a **quick DPI/pixel size chart** - a **formula for any print size** - or help you choose the right size for a specific project.
How much do stock photo marketplaces cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
It depends whether you mean **buying** stock photos or **selling** on the marketplace. ### Buying stock photos (typical prices) - **Shutterstock**: about **$10–$30 per image** on credit packs; subscriptions can lower this. - **Adobe Stock**: about **$10–$30 per standard image**; subscriptions often cheaper per image. - **iStock by Getty Images**: about **$8–$20+ per image**; higher for premium/rights-managed. - **Alamy**: often **$20–$100+ per image**, especially for editorial or niche uses. - **Depositphotos / Dreamstime**: often **$1–$10 per image** with subscriptions or packs. - **Envato Elements**: **subscription-only**, around **$17–$33/month** for unlimited downloads. ### Selling on stock marketplaces Usually the marketplace takes a big cut: - **Shutterstock**: contributors often earn **~15%–40%** - **Adobe Stock**: often **~33%** - **iStock**: often **~15%–45%** - **Alamy**: contributors can get **~40%–50%** ### Extra costs to watch - Subscription plans - Extended licenses - Editorial vs commercial licensing - AI-generated content restrictions on some sites If you want, I can compare the **best cheap marketplaces** or the **best ones for earning as a contributor**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Stock photo marketplaces usually cost **either a subscription or pay-as-you-go credits**. For example, **Adobe Stock** starts at **$29.99/mo for 3 assets**, **$49.99/mo for 25 assets**, **$79.99/mo for 40 assets**, and **$249.99/mo for 750 assets**; it also sells credit packs from **$49.95** upward. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/Plans)) **Shutterstock** shows a **$29/mo** annual subscription option and a **$49** one-time pack option on its pricing page. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **iStock** lists **$29/mo** for Basic, **$70/mo** for Premium, and **$99/mo** for Premium + Video; its credit-pack model is for one-off purchases. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing)) **Alamy** has a more per-license model, with common image licenses starting at **$19.99** and RF image licenses from **$9.99** for vectors to **$100+** for photos. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/licenses-and-pricing.aspx?utm_source=openai)) So the short answer is: **roughly $20 to $100+ per month for subscriptions, or about $10 to $200+ per image/license depending on site and usage rights**. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/Plans)) If you want, I can also give you the **cheapest option for 1 image, 10 images/month, or commercial use**.
Are there any free stock photo marketplaces? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — a few popular free stock photo marketplaces are: - **Unsplash** — high-quality, modern photos; very popular for websites and blogs. - **Pexels** — free photos and videos; easy to search and download. - **Pixabay** — photos, illustrations, vectors, and videos. - **Burst by Shopify** — good for business/ecommerce-style images. - **Gratisography** — more quirky, creative photos. - **Openverse** — search engine for Creative Commons-licensed images. A quick note: “free” doesn’t always mean “no rules,” so check the license for commercial use, attribution, and restrictions before publishing. If you want, I can also list the best free sites for **commercial use**, **AI-safe licensing**, or **non-overused images**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — a few well-known free stock photo sites are: - **Unsplash** — free for most personal, commercial, and editorial uses under the Unsplash License. ([help.unsplash.com](https://help.unsplash.com/en/articles/2612315-can-i-use-unsplash-images-for-personal-or-commercial-projects?utm_source=openai)) - **Pexels** — free to use for personal and commercial purposes, without attribution. ([help.pexels.com](https://help.pexels.com/hc/en-us/articles/360042295174-What-is-the-license-of-the-photos-and-videos-on-Pexels?utm_source=openai)) - **Pixabay** — free stock photos, vectors, videos, and more under the Pixabay Content License. ([pixabay.com](https://pixabay.com/service/faq/?utm_source=openai)) - **Burst by Shopify** — Shopify’s free stock photo platform. ([deadeasysoftware.com](https://deadeasysoftware.com/wp-content/ebk/easycash/Easy-Cash-Make-Money-With-Simple-Videos-FreeApps.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free sites for commercial use**, or 2. a **curated list by style** (modern, editorial, business, nature, etc.).
What is the cheapest stock photo marketplace? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **lowest-cost paid stock photo marketplace**, **Depositphotos** is usually one of the cheapest. Good budget options: - **Depositphotos** — often very low per-image pricing with subscriptions/credits - **Dreamstime** — affordable credits, especially for smaller downloads - **Bigstock** — simple low-cost subscriptions - **Adobe Stock** — not always the cheapest, but often good value with a subscription If you want the **absolute cheapest overall**, **free stock sites** like **Pexels**, **Unsplash**, and **Pixabay** cost $0. If you want, I can compare the **cheapest plans for 1 image, 10 images, or monthly subscriptions**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **mainstream paid stock photo marketplaces**, **Bigstock** looks like the cheapest on a per-image basis right now: its “best value” plan is **300 images/month for $99**, or **$0.33/image**. It also has a **50 images/month for $79** option at **$1.58/image**. ([bigstockphoto.com](https://www.bigstockphoto.com/subscribe/)) For comparison, **iStock**’s basic subscription starts at **$29/month for 10 downloads** (**$2.90/download**), and Adobe Stock’s credit pack example shows **$359.99 for 40 standard images**. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing)) So: **Bigstock is probably the cheapest mainstream option** if you’re buying stock photos. If you want, I can compare the cheapest options for **single downloads** vs **subscriptions**.
Do stock photo marketplaces offer monthly subscriptions? transactional 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes. Many stock photo marketplaces offer monthly subscriptions, often as **download plans** or **credit packs**. Examples: - **Adobe Stock** — monthly subscription plans - **Shutterstock** — monthly plans and image packs - **iStock by Getty Images** — monthly subscription options - **Depositphotos** — monthly subscription plans - **Envato Elements** — monthly subscription for unlimited downloads - **Freepik Premium** — monthly subscription If you want, I can also compare the best one for **low cost**, **highest quality**, or **best for commercial use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes. Many stock photo marketplaces offer **monthly subscriptions**, though some are really **annual plans billed monthly**. For example, Adobe Stock has monthly or annual subscription options, and iStock offers both **month-to-month** and **annual** plans, with monthly billing available for the annual plan too. Shutterstock also lists subscription plans with monthly payment options. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare the major marketplaces by **price, download limits, and cancellation flexibility**.
Are there stock photo marketplaces with pay-per-download pricing? transactional 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — several stock photo marketplaces offer **pay-per-download / on-demand** pricing, not just subscriptions. Examples: - **Shutterstock** — on-demand image packs and single-image purchases - **Adobe Stock** — buy credit packs or single assets - **Getty Images** — per-image licensing - **iStock by Getty Images** — credits or single downloads - **Alamy** — direct per-license pricing - **Depositphotos** — credit packs / pay-as-you-go options - **Dreamstime** — image credits and single purchases - **123RF** — credit-based, per-download options If you want, I can also rank these by **cheapest**, **best quality**, or **most flexible licensing**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes. Common examples are: - **Shutterstock** — offers **packs** with a set number of downloads, plus subscriptions. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Adobe Stock** — offers **credit packs** / **on-demand** purchases, which are basically pay-as-you-go. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Alamy** — lets you buy a **single license** or a **discounted pack** of licenses. ([alamy.com](https://www.alamy.com/licenses-and-pricing.aspx?utm_source=openai)) - **Bigstock** — has a **Pay As You Go** option in addition to subscriptions. ([investor.shutterstock.com](https://investor.shutterstock.com/news-releases/news-release-details/shutterstock-gives-affiliates-raise?utm_source=openai)) So: **yes**, several stock photo marketplaces still do pay-per-download pricing, usually under labels like **credits**, **packs**, or **pay-as-you-go**. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best cheap pay-per-download options** for photos vs. vectors vs. editorial images.
What stock photo marketplaces have free trials? transactional 140/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few stock photo marketplaces offer **free trials or trial credits** (availability can change by country/account): - **Adobe Stock** — usually the most reliable trial; often a **30-day free trial** with a set number of assets. - **Shutterstock** — sometimes offers a **free trial / trial plan** for new users. - **iStock by Getty Images** — occasionally offers **trial credits** or promo trials. - **123RF** — sometimes has **trial packs** or free credit promos. - **Depositphotos** — may offer **trial downloads** or limited promo access. **Best pick:** **Adobe Stock** It’s the easiest to find a legitimate trial on and has a big library. If you want, I can also list the **best free-stock alternatives** (no trial needed) like **Unsplash, Pexels, Pixabay**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—these stock photo marketplaces currently advertise free trials: - **Adobe Stock**: 30-day free trial, with **10 standard assets** or sometimes **25/40 assets** depending on plan. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/royalty-free/adobestockpromo?utm_source=openai)) - **iStock (Getty Images)**: a **Free Trial month** on annual plans; downloads during the trial are yours to keep if you cancel in time. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Depositphotos**: a **7-day free trial** is available in certain countries. ([depositphotos.com](https://depositphotos.com/faq/article/360007310594.html?utm_source=openai)) **Note:** Shutterstock appears to offer free-to-start API/test access and free content, but I did **not** find a clear current consumer stock-photo free trial on its main pricing pages. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/api/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best free-trial value** or **cheapest after trial**.
How much do commercial stock photo licenses cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Commercial stock photo licenses usually cost: - **Microstock:** about **$1–$15 per image** - **Shutterstock**: often **$29–$99/month** for subscriptions, or **~$10+ per image** on smaller plans - **Adobe Stock**: **~$9.99/image** on standard credit packs, cheaper in subscription bundles - **iStock by Getty Images**: **~$8–$33/image** depending on standard vs. premium content - **Rights-managed / premium stock:** about **$50–$500+ per image** - **Getty Images** and **Alamy** often price this way, depending on usage, size, duration, and territory - **Exclusive or high-profile usage:** can be **$500 to several thousand dollars+** - Common for major ad campaigns, packaging, or large print runs What drives price: - **Where you’ll use it** (web, social, print, ads, packaging) - **Audience size / reach** - **Duration** - **Territory** - **Exclusivity** - **Image resolution / quality** If you want the cheapest common options, start with **Adobe Stock**, **Shutterstock**, or **iStock**. For more licensing control, look at **Getty Images** or **Alamy**. If you tell me your use case (website, ad, product packaging, etc.), I can estimate a more realistic price range.
retrieval Not mentioned
Commercial stock photo licenses usually fall into a few buckets: - **Microstock subscriptions**: often about **$3–$10 per image** if you’re buying in volume. Shutterstock’s current pricing shows **$29/month for 10 downloads** (about **$2.90/image**) and **$49 for a 2-download pack** (about **$24.50/image**). ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Single-image / credit-pack purchases**: often about **$10–$50+ per image**. Adobe Stock’s credit pack example is **$359.99 for 40 standard images**, which works out to about **$9/image**; their premium assets cost more, and extended licenses are extra. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/)) - **Premium agencies / broader rights**: can be **hundreds of dollars per image**. Getty Images’ current pricing page shows single-download creative assets at **€115, €300, or €500** depending on size, and their business offerings go beyond simple single-image pricing. ([gettyimages.fi](https://www.gettyimages.fi/plans-and-pricing)) Quick rule of thumb: **$5–$25/image for common commercial use**, **$25–$100+ for better-rights or premium use**, and **$100s+ for high-end or special-use licensing**. That’s an inference from the current pricing pages above. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also break this down by **website use, ads, print, packaging, or resale**.
Which stock photo marketplaces are best value for money? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best value depends on how many images you buy: - **Adobe Stock** — best overall quality/value if you need a mix of photos, vectors, and video. Good subscription bundles. - **Shutterstock** — best for volume and variety. Usually pricier than Adobe, but strong catalog and easy licensing. - **iStock by Getty Images** — good mid-range option, especially with credits/subscriptions. Cheaper than Getty, better than many budget sites. - **Depositphotos** — often one of the best pure budget options for businesses. Strong if you want low-cost subscriptions. - **Envato Elements** — best flat-rate value if you need stock photos plus templates, graphics, fonts, and video. Great for heavy users. - **Dreamstime** — good low-cost alternative, especially with credit packs and occasional deals. - **123RF** — another budget-friendly choice with flexible packs and subscriptions. If you want the shortest answer: - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best budget:** Depositphotos - **Best unlimited-style value:** Envato Elements - **Best for lots of standard stock:** Shutterstock If you tell me your budget and monthly image needs, I can narrow it to the best one or two.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best value usually breaks down like this: - **Best overall for heavy use:** **Envato Elements** — $16.50/mo billed annually, with unlimited downloads of 27M+ creative assets (photos, video, templates, etc.). Great if you need lots of content, not just photos. ([elements.envato.com](https://elements.envato.com/pricing)) - **Best pure stock-photo subscription:** **Adobe Stock** — annual plans start at **10 assets/mo for $29.99/mo** (about $2.99 per asset), and Adobe says subscriptions are the best deal for standard assets. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for one-off projects:** **Shutterstock** — packs start at **$49** and subscriptions at **$29/mo** for 10 downloads, so it’s decent if you don’t want a big commitment. ([shutterstock.com](https://www.shutterstock.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you need higher-end curated content:** **iStock** — more flexible with credits, and it says subscriptions are best value if you’ll download as few as 4 images/month. ([istockphoto.com](https://www.istockphoto.com/plans-and-pricing)) - **Best free value:** **Pexels** and **Unsplash** — both offer free-use photo libraries; Pexels explicitly says photos/videos can be downloaded and used for free, and Unsplash’s free license allows broad use with some restrictions. ([pexels.com](https://www.pexels.com/license/?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation:** - **Budget + lots of content:** Envato Elements - **Most balanced paid photo library:** Adobe Stock - **Occasional downloads:** Shutterstock - **Free-first:** Pexels / Unsplash If you want, I can also rank these for **small business**, **blogging**, or **commercial ads**.
Do stock photo marketplaces have team plans? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes. Many stock photo marketplaces offer **team / business / enterprise plans**. Examples: - **Shutterstock** — Team subscriptions and enterprise licensing - **Adobe Stock** — Teams plans - **Getty Images / iStock** — Business and enterprise plans - **Envato Elements** — Team plans - **Depositphotos** — Team/business licenses - **Alamy** — Custom business licensing These usually add things like: - shared billing - seat management - usage controls - centralized license tracking - broader indemnification or enterprise terms If you want, I can also compare the best **team plans for small teams vs agencies**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — many stock photo marketplaces offer team/business plans. For example, Adobe Stock has a dedicated Teams plan with pooled licensing and admin management, Shutterstock offers team plans for up to 10 members, iStock says you can request a customized plan for your team or business, and Envato Elements has Team pricing. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/teams?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare the main ones by price, seat limits, and licensing.
Can I buy stock photos without a subscription? transactional 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes. Many stock photo sites let you buy images individually without a subscription. Good options: - **Shutterstock** — single-image credits or on-demand packs - **Adobe Stock** — buy image credits or a pack, no subscription required - **iStock by Getty Images** — one-off purchases and credits - **Getty Images** — individual license purchases, usually pricier - **Depositphotos** — on-demand image packs - **Alamy** — per-image licensing, good for editorial and niche photos - **Pond5** — also sells stock photos individually If you want, I can recommend the **cheapest** option, **best for commercial use**, or **best for editorial/news photos**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes. Many stock-photo sites let you buy images **without a subscription** via **credit packs** or **pay-as-you-go** purchases. Adobe Stock says its credit packs are “one time purchases” and are “best for…one-off projects,” and iStock says credits are a good option for “one-off or hard-to-predict image needs.” Shutterstock also has an a la carte / pay-as-you-go option for one-off projects. ([stock.adobe.com](https://stock.adobe.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can list the best no-subscription stock photo sites and which is cheapest for 1–5 images.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best stock photo marketplaces for commercial use?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for commercial use: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for quality, search, and seamless licensing inside Creative Cloud. Strong for commercial projects. 2. **Shutterstock** Huge library, very reliable for ads, websites, and marketing. Great breadth and contributor quality. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium/editorial-quality visuals and some high-end commercial needs. Getty is pricier; iStock is the more budget-friendly option. 4. **Envato Elements** Excellent value if you need stock photos plus templates, graphics, and video. Good for agencies and frequent creators. 5. **Depositphotos** Solid mid-range option with flexible pricing and a large commercial-use library. Often cheaper than Adobe/Shutterstock. 6. **Canva Pro** Convenient if you already design in Canva. Licensing is easy, but it’s better for everyday marketing than for exclusive/high-end needs. 7. **Alamy** Strong for niche, authentic, and editorial-style imagery. Good for commercial use when you need something less generic. 8. **Pond5** Better known for video, but also has photos and other assets. Useful if you need mixed media licensing. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best budget/value:** Envato Elements or Depositphotos - **Best premium library:** Shutterstock or Getty Images - **Best for easy design workflow:** Canva Pro ### Quick warning For commercial use, always check: - **Standard vs extended license** - **Model/property releases** - **Editorial-only restrictions** - Whether use is for **ads, packaging, merchandise, or resale** If you want, I can also rank the best marketplaces for **small businesses**, **agencies**, or **Amazon/Etsy product listings**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for **commercial use**: 1. **Adobe Stock** — great all-around choice; strong quality, easy licensing, good for marketers and designers. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, reliable for commercial projects, strong search tools. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial and commercial content; best if you need high-end or exclusive-looking images. 4. **Alamy** — very large and diverse collection, often better for niche or authentic imagery. 5. **Depositphotos** — good value for businesses needing lots of licensed images at lower cost. 6. **Envato Elements** — best if you want an all-in-one subscription for photos, graphics, video, and templates. 7. **Stocksy** — curated, artistic, more modern/unique commercial images. 8. **123RF** — budget-friendly option with a broad commercial library. 9. **Dreamstime** — solid mid-range marketplace with flexible pricing. 10. **Pond5** — strong if you also need stock video, music, and motion assets. **Best picks by need:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best library size:** Shutterstock - **Best premium/enterprise:** Getty Images - **Best budget:** Depositphotos or 123RF - **Best subscription bundle:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them by **price, license simplicity, or image quality**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for **commercial use**: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best overall - Huge library, strong licensing, easy integration with Creative Cloud. - Good for brands and agencies. 2. **Shutterstock** — best for breadth and search - Very large collection of photos, vectors, video, and music. - Popular for commercial campaigns and editorial-style content. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — best for premium and enterprise - Getty is pricier but strong for high-end editorial/commercial imagery. - iStock is the more affordable sibling with solid licensing options. 4. **Envato Elements** — best subscription value - Unlimited downloads on subscription, includes photos, graphics, templates, and video. - Great for marketers and small teams. 5. **Depositphotos** — good mid-range option - Large library, flexible pricing, and decent commercial licensing. - Often cheaper than Shutterstock/Adobe. 6. **123RF** — budget-friendly - Useful for smaller commercial projects and quick one-off needs. - Lower cost, decent variety. 7. **Canva Pro** — easiest for simple commercial design workflows - Handy if you’re already designing in Canva. - Not as robust as dedicated marketplaces, but convenient. **Best picks by use case** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best premium:** Getty Images - **Best budget subscription:** Envato Elements - **Best for volume:** Shutterstock If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **license safety**, or **image quality**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best stock photo marketplaces for **commercial use**: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for quality, variety, and easy integration with Creative Cloud. 2. **Shutterstock** Huge library, strong for business, editorial-style, and niche commercial assets. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Premium licensing and high-end imagery; great for ad campaigns and brands. 4. **Envato Elements** Best value if you need photos plus templates, graphics, and video under one subscription. 5. **Depositphotos** Good pricing, broad catalog, and flexible subscription/credit options. 6. **Dreamstime** Solid budget-friendly option with a long-running commercial stock library. 7. **123RF** Affordable and decent for general commercial content. 8. **Alamy** Very large, diverse catalog; useful if you need more unusual or editorial-looking commercial images. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best for volume:** Shutterstock - **Best premium/licensing:** Getty Images - **Best budget bundle:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also give you the **best marketplaces for AI-generated stock**, **the cheapest options**, or **which one is best for small businesses**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For **commercial use**, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** — great quality, seamless for designers, strong licensing. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, solid for business/commercial projects. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium/editorial-to-commercial options, strong rights-managed and royalty-free choices. 4. **Envato Elements** — best if you want an affordable subscription for lots of assets, including photos. 5. **Alamy** — very large and diverse collection, useful for niche or hard-to-find images. 6. **Depositphotos** — good value, broad library, easy commercial licensing. 7. **123RF** — budget-friendly and decent for general commercial content. 8. **Stocksy** — curated, high-end, more unique imagery for brands. 9. **Dreamstime** — lower-cost option with a wide selection. 10. **Canva Pro** — convenient if you need stock photos inside a design workflow. **Best overall picks:** - **Adobe Stock** for quality + workflow - **Shutterstock** for breadth - **Stocksy** for premium, distinctive brand visuals - **Envato Elements** for subscription value If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image quality**, or **license safety** for commercial use.
Which stock photo marketplaces are most popular right now?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular stock photo marketplaces right now are generally: 1. **Shutterstock** — biggest mainstream marketplace; huge buyer demand. 2. **Adobe Stock** — very popular with designers and Creative Cloud users. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial + commercial licensing. 4. **Alamy** — strong for editorial, news, and niche images. 5. **Depositphotos** — popular budget-friendly option. 6. **123RF** — broad catalog, especially for lower-cost licensing. 7. **Dreamstime** — long-running, solid mid-tier marketplace. 8. **Pond5** — known more for video, but also sells photos. If you’re choosing where to upload, the best starting combo is usually **Shutterstock + Adobe Stock + iStock/Getty**. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for contributors**, **best royalties**, or **best for buyers**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular stock photo marketplaces right now are: 1. **Shutterstock** — still one of the biggest and most widely used. 2. **Adobe Stock** — very popular with designers and Creative Cloud users. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium, highly recognized, strong editorial + commercial library. 4. **Alamy** — especially strong for editorial and niche imagery. 5. **Depositphotos** — large library, popular with small businesses and agencies. 6. **Freepik** — very popular for stock photos, vectors, and templates. 7. **Envato Elements** — strong all-in-one subscription for creatives. 8. **Dreamstime** — long-running marketplace with a solid contributor base. 9. **123RF** — still widely used, especially for budget-friendly licensing. 10. **Pexels / Unsplash** — very popular for free stock photos. If you want, I can also rank them by: - **best for contributors** - **best for buyers** - **highest earnings potential** - **easiest to get accepted on**
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Right now, the most popular stock photo marketplaces are generally: 1. **Shutterstock** — biggest all-around marketplace, strong demand and huge library 2. **Adobe Stock** — very popular with designers and Creative Cloud users 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial and commercial content 4. **Alamy** — strong for editorial, news, and niche images 5. **Depositphotos** — popular for affordable commercial stock 6. **Envato Elements** — subscription-based, popular for creatives and marketers 7. **123RF** — broad library, still widely used 8. **Dreamstime** — smaller than the top tier, but still active 9. **Freepik** — very popular for graphics, vectors, and stock-style assets 10. **Pexels / Unsplash** — not traditional marketplaces, but extremely popular for free stock photos If you mean **best for selling your photos**, the most established are: - **Shutterstock** - **Adobe Stock** - **iStock** - **Alamy** If you want, I can also rank them by: - **best to buy from** - **best to sell on** - **best for beginners**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular stock photo marketplaces right now are: 1. **Shutterstock** — biggest all-around marketplace; very strong for photos, vectors, and video. 2. **Adobe Stock** — especially popular with designers because it integrates with Creative Cloud. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial and commercial licensing; iStock is the more budget-friendly branch. 4. **Alamy** — huge for editorial, news, and niche imagery. 5. **Depositphotos** — popular mid-range option with a broad library. 6. **Dreamstime** — long-running marketplace with a solid contributor base. 7. **123RF** — widely used, especially for affordable licensing. 8. **Envato Elements** — popular subscription-based option for creatives. 9. **Pond5** — especially strong for video and motion assets. 10. **Freepik** — very popular for stock graphics, vectors, and some photos. If you want, I can also rank these for: - **buyers** - **contributors** - **highest payouts** - **best for AI-generated stock**
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular stock photo marketplaces right now are: - **Adobe Stock** — one of the biggest overall, strong for both buyers and contributors - **Shutterstock** — still a top-tier giant with huge volume and broad demand - **iStock by Getty Images** — popular for premium/editorial-style licensing - **Getty Images** — especially strong for editorial, news, and high-end commercial use - **Envato Elements** — very popular for subscriptions; includes photos plus assets - **Alamy** — known for a large, varied library and editorial content - **Depositphotos** — widely used, especially by small businesses and agencies - **Dreamstime** — long-running marketplace with steady contributor base - **123RF** — popular in budget-friendly stock licensing - **Freepik** — very popular for subscription-based design assets, including photos If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best for selling photos**, 2. **best for buying cheap images**, or 3. **best for editorial vs commercial stock**.
What are the top stock photo marketplaces for businesses?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for businesses: 1. **Adobe Stock** — huge library, strong search, easy licensing, good for teams already using Adobe. 2. **Shutterstock** — one of the biggest catalogs; strong for marketing, editorial, and business content. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium-quality imagery; Getty for high-end/editorial, iStock for more budget-friendly business use. 4. **Envato Elements** — subscription-based and good value if you need stock photos plus templates, video, and graphics. 5. **Depositphotos** — solid budget option with flexible subscription and on-demand licenses. 6. **Pond5** — especially good if you also need video, but has a decent photo library too. 7. **Alamy** — broad, diverse collection; useful for hard-to-find or more authentic imagery. 8. **Dreamstime** — affordable and decent for routine business marketing content. 9. **123RF** — lower-cost stock library with broad commercial coverage. 10. **Canva Pro** — convenient for small teams that want stock photos built into design workflows. **Best overall for most businesses:** Adobe Stock or Shutterstock. **Best premium/editorial:** Getty Images. **Best budget/subscription value:** Envato Elements or Depositphotos. If you want, I can also rank them by **price, image quality, or licensing simplicity**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for businesses: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best all-around for quality, integration with Adobe apps, and broad commercial licensing. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong enterprise options, and good for fast, general business use. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial and commercial imagery; higher-end, more exclusive look. 4. **Envato Elements** — best value if you need photos plus graphics, templates, and video under one subscription. 5. **Alamy** — very large and diverse collection, including more niche and authentic business imagery. 6. **Depositphotos** — budget-friendly with solid business-focused content and flexible subscriptions. 7. **Dreamstime** — affordable with a decent selection for small businesses and regular content needs. 8. **Canva Pro** — convenient if your team already designs in Canva; good for simple business marketing assets. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for startups, enterprise, budget, or marketing teams**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for businesses: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for businesses already using Adobe tools (Photoshop, Illustrator, Express). Huge library, clean licensing, easy workflows. 2. **Shutterstock** One of the biggest and most popular. Strong for general business, marketing, and editorial-style needs; good enterprise plans. 3. **Getty Images** Premium option for high-quality, brand-forward imagery. Often chosen for corporate campaigns and media use. 4. **iStock by Getty Images** Lower-cost sibling to Getty. Good balance of price and quality for SMBs. 5. **Envato Elements** Best for teams needing more than photos—also templates, graphics, video, and fonts. Subscription model is very business-friendly. 6. **Depositphotos** Solid budget-friendly marketplace with broad commercial use. Popular with small and midsize businesses. 7. **Alamy** Strong for niche, authentic, and hard-to-find images. Useful for businesses needing less “stocky” visuals. 8. **Pond5** Better known for video, but also offers photos and creative assets. Good if you need mixed media. **Best pick by use case** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best enterprise/library size:** Shutterstock - **Best premium brand campaigns:** Getty Images - **Best budget SMB option:** iStock or Depositphotos - **Best all-in-one creative subscription:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them by **price, licensing simplicity, or image quality**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for businesses: 1. **Shutterstock** — Huge library, strong search, clear commercial licensing. 2. **Adobe Stock** — Great if your team uses Adobe Creative Cloud; easy workflow. 3. **Getty Images** — Premium/editorial-quality content, ideal for high-end campaigns. 4. **iStock by Getty Images** — More budget-friendly than Getty, good for everyday business use. 5. **Alamy** — Very broad collection, including niche and editorial images. 6. **Depositphotos** — Affordable plans and solid business-friendly licensing. 7. **Dreamstime** — Large catalog, flexible pricing, good for small businesses. 8. **Envato Elements** — Best for teams needing photos plus templates, graphics, and video. 9. **Canva Pro** — Convenient for marketing teams creating social posts and ads fast. 10. **Pond5** — Strong if you also need stock video, music, and some photos. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Shutterstock or Adobe Stock - **Best premium:** Getty Images - **Best budget:** iStock, Depositphotos, Dreamstime - **Best all-in-one content:** Envato Elements or Canva Pro If you want, I can also rank them by **price, licensing clarity, or image quality**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for businesses: 1. **Adobe Stock** — strong for business, marketing, and creative teams; great integration with Adobe apps. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, reliable licensing, good for all-purpose business use. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial and commercial imagery; higher-end options. 4. **Envato Elements** — subscription-based, good value if you need photos plus templates, graphics, and video. 5. **Depositphotos** — budget-friendly with a broad commercial library. 6. **Alamy** — strong for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images. 7. **Dreamstime** — affordable option with decent variety for SMBs. 8. **123RF** — lower-cost marketplace, useful for volume buying. **Best overall for most businesses:** - **Adobe Stock** - **Shutterstock** - **Getty Images/iStock** If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image quality**, or **best licensing for marketing/commercial use**.
Which stock photo marketplace has the best selection?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Shutterstock** usually has the **broadest overall stock photo selection** for most buyers. Quick take: - **Best total volume:** **Shutterstock** - **Best quality-to-search experience:** **Adobe Stock** - **Best premium/editorial coverage:** **Getty Images** - **Best for budget licensing:** **Depositphotos** or **Envato Elements** If you want one answer: **Shutterstock**. If you want the best mix of quality and usability: **Adobe Stock**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **the biggest overall selection**, **Shutterstock** usually has the deepest library. Quick take: - **Shutterstock** — best for sheer volume and broad commercial coverage - **Adobe Stock** — strong selection, especially for designers using Adobe apps - **Getty Images / iStock** — best premium/editorial content, but smaller and pricier - **Alamy** — huge variety, especially editorial and niche content - **Depositphotos** — good budget option, but not the best selection overall **My pick:** - **Best selection overall:** Shutterstock - **Best premium quality:** Adobe Stock or Getty Images If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **quality**, or **licensing flexibility**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **overall breadth and variety**, **Shutterstock** usually has the **best selection**. Quick take: - **Shutterstock** — biggest all-around library; best for general stock photos, vectors, and editorial variety. - **Adobe Stock** — excellent quality and strong integration with Creative Cloud; slightly smaller than Shutterstock. - **Getty Images / iStock** — best for premium/editorial and higher-end imagery, but not usually the broadest. - **Envato Elements** — good if you want unlimited downloads, but selection is narrower than the big two. **Best overall selection:** **Shutterstock** **Best for quality + design workflow:** **Adobe Stock** **Best premium/editorial:** **Getty Images** If you want, I can also rank them for **price**, **quality**, or **best subscription value**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best overall selection**, I’d go with **Shutterstock** first. - **Shutterstock** — usually the broadest, strongest all-around library for stock photos, vectors, and video. - **Adobe Stock** — very strong selection, especially if you use Creative Cloud; often a bit cleaner/more curated. - **Getty Images / iStock** — best for premium editorial and high-end commercial imagery. - **Alamy** — great for niche, unusual, and editorial content. **Short answer:** - **Best breadth:** Shutterstock - **Best premium quality:** Getty Images - **Best integrated workflow:** Adobe Stock If you want, I can also rank them for **price**, **quality**, or **best value**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall selection:** **Shutterstock** It usually has the **largest and broadest library** of stock photos, illustrations, vectors, and editorial images. **Also strong:** - **Adobe Stock** — great quality and very good for creative/professional use - **Getty Images / iStock** — strongest for premium/editorial, but usually pricier - **Alamy** — huge, especially for niche and editorial content If you want the **widest “something for everything” selection**, pick **Shutterstock**. If you want **best-looking curated assets**, pick **Adobe Stock**.
What are the most recommended stock photo marketplaces?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most commonly recommended stock photo marketplaces are: - **Adobe Stock** — strong quality, huge buyer base, easy if you already use Adobe tools. - **Shutterstock** — one of the biggest and most established; good volume for contributors. - **iStock by Getty Images** — strong for premium/editorial-style licensing and higher-end buyers. - **Getty Images** — premium marketplace, harder to get accepted, but can command better pricing. - **Alamy** — good for editorial, niche, and unusual images; more flexible content mix. - **Dreamstime** — long-running microstock site, decent for beginners. - **Depositphotos** — broad marketplace with steady demand and contributor-friendly setup. - **123RF** — easy to join, smaller than the top tier but still useful. - **Canva Contributor** — growing demand, especially for simple design-friendly content. - **Pond5** — especially strong if you also shoot video, motion, or audio. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners**, **highest earnings potential**, or **easiest to get approved**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended stock photo marketplaces are: - **Adobe Stock** — best overall for quality, search, and integration with Creative Cloud - **Shutterstock** — huge library, very strong for business/commercial use - **iStock by Getty Images** — good premium/editorial-style content, trusted brand - **Getty Images** — top-tier premium/editorial, but usually expensive - **Depositphotos** — solid budget-friendly option with a broad library - **Alamy** — great for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images - **Envato Elements** — best if you want a subscription with photos + graphics + templates - **Dreamstime** — long-running marketplace with decent variety and lower prices - **123RF** — good low-cost alternative for standard stock needs - **Canva Pro** — convenient if you already use Canva for design **If you want the safest picks:** 1. **Adobe Stock** 2. **Shutterstock** 3. **Getty Images / iStock** If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image quality**, or **best for contributors selling photos**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The most commonly recommended stock photo marketplaces are: - **Adobe Stock** — best all-around for buyers; huge library and strong integration with Creative Cloud. - **Shutterstock** — one of the biggest and most established; broad selection, good search tools. - **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial and commercial content; strong for higher-end needs. - **Alamy** — very large, diverse archive; especially good for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find imagery. - **Envato Elements** — best value if you need stock photos plus graphics, video, and templates in one subscription. - **Depositphotos** — popular lower-cost option with a good commercial library. - **123RF** — budget-friendly and decent for standard marketing needs. - **Dreamstime** — solid mid-tier marketplace with flexible licensing. - **Freepik** — great if you also want vectors, icons, and design assets alongside photos. - **Canva Photos** — convenient for social/content creators already using Canva. If you want the short recommendation: - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best huge library:** Shutterstock - **Best premium/editorial:** Getty Images - **Best budget value:** Depositphotos or 123RF - **Best all-in-one creative subscription:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them for **cheap licensing, best contributor earnings, or best for commercial use**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended stock photo marketplaces are: - **Adobe Stock** — best overall for quality, integration with Creative Cloud, and strong licensing. - **Shutterstock** — huge library, great search, very reliable for commercial use. - **Getty Images / iStock** — premium/editorial quality; Getty for high-end, iStock for more affordable options. - **Adobe Stock** and **Shutterstock** are usually the first two I’d recommend. - **Envato Elements** — best value if you need photos plus templates, graphics, and video in one subscription. - **Alamy** — strong for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images. - **Depositphotos** — good budget-friendly option with a large catalog. - **Dreamstime** — decent mid-tier marketplace, often cheaper than the top names. - **123RF** — another budget-friendly choice with broad coverage. - **Pond5** — especially good if you also need stock video, audio, and motion graphics. If you want the short version: - **Best quality/pro:** Adobe Stock, Getty Images - **Best all-around:** Shutterstock - **Best value:** Envato Elements, Depositphotos - **Best niche/editorial:** Alamy If you want, I can also rank them for **photographers selling images** vs **buyers looking to license photos**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended stock photo marketplaces are: - **Adobe Stock** — best overall quality and smooth workflow, especially for Creative Cloud users. - **Shutterstock** — huge library and strong search; one of the biggest all-around options. - **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial and commercial images; good for higher-end needs. - **Alamy** — excellent for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images. - **Depositphotos** — good value with a broad commercial library. - **Dreamstime** — solid budget-friendly option with decent variety. - **123RF** — affordable and useful for general business content. - **Envato Elements** — best if you want a subscription for photos plus graphics/video/templates. If you want free options, the most popular are: - **Unsplash** - **Pexels** - **Pixabay** If you tell me your use case (blog, ads, social media, editorial, or commercial), I can rank the best ones for you.
Which stock photo marketplaces are best for editorial images?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **editorial images**: - **Alamy** — one of the strongest for editorial; huge variety, news, sports, travel, and niche subjects. - **Getty Images** — premium editorial coverage; especially strong for major news, celebrities, sports, and entertainment. - **Reuters Connect** — best for hard news and global current events. - **AP Images** — excellent for breaking news, politics, sports, and archival editorial content. - **AFP Forum** — strong international news and editorial coverage. - **Shutterstock Editorial** — solid marketplace for newsworthy and celebrity/editorial usage. - **iStock by Getty Images** — good editorial selection, usually more affordable than Getty. - **Pond5** — useful if you also need editorial video; has some editorial stills too. If you want the **best all-around editorial marketplace**, start with **Alamy** and **Getty Images**. If you want **news/editorial wire images**, go with **Reuters, AP, or AFP**. If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **licensing flexibility**, or **best for celebrities/news/sports**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **editorial images**: 1. **Getty Images** — strongest for breaking news, sports, celebrity, politics, and premium editorial coverage. 2. **Shutterstock Editorial** — huge library, easier licensing workflow, good for general editorial use. 3. **Alamy** — very broad editorial selection, especially news, travel, and niche scenes. 4. **iStock by Getty Images** — smaller than Getty, but solid for affordable editorial options. 5. **AP Images** — excellent for news/editorial, especially if you need authoritative wire coverage. 6. **Reuters Connect** — top-tier for global news and current events. 7. **Adobe Stock Editorial** — integrated with Adobe tools, decent for magazines/blogs needing editorial-safe content. 8. **AFP Forum** — strong international news and documentary-style editorial imagery. **Best overall picks:** - **Getty Images** for premium editorial - **Alamy** for variety and niche subjects - **Reuters / AP** for news accuracy and speed - **Shutterstock Editorial** for convenience and scale If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **license simplicity**, or **news coverage**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **editorial images**: 1. **Getty Images** - Best overall for news, sports, celebrities, politics, and high-end editorial use. - Huge archive, strong newsroom trust, excellent search. 2. **Alamy** - Best value and breadth. - Very large editorial library, often more affordable than Getty, good for niche and local news images. 3. **Reuters Connect** - Best for current news and fast-turnaround editorial coverage. - Strong for journalism, breaking news, politics, and global events. 4. **AP Images** - Great for news editorial, especially politics, business, and major world events. - Reliable, reputable, and very strong archival depth. 5. **Shutterstock Editorial** - Good for a mix of editorial and commercial-style content. - Easy to search and license, broad inventory. 6. **iStock by Getty Images** - Better for smaller budgets within the Getty ecosystem. - Not as deep as Getty, but useful for general editorial needs. 7. **Adobe Stock Editorial** - Convenient if you already use Adobe tools. - Solid for general editorial, though weaker than Getty/Reuters/AP for hard news. **Best picks by use case** - **Hard news / journalism:** Reuters, AP Images - **Celebrity / sports / entertainment:** Getty Images - **Budget-friendly editorial:** Alamy - **General editorial with easy licensing:** Shutterstock Editorial, Adobe Stock Editorial If you want, I can also give you a **“best by price”** or **“best by licensing restrictions”** comparison.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **editorial images**: 1. **Getty Images** - Strongest for major news, sports, celebrity, and global editorial coverage. - Best overall choice for premium editorial licensing. 2. **Alamy** - Huge editorial archive, especially for news, travel, lifestyle, and niche subjects. - Often better for varied, less-polished, or harder-to-find editorial images. 3. **Reuters Connect** - Excellent for hard news and current events. - Best if you need fast, authoritative editorial coverage. 4. **Associated Press Images (AP Images)** - Top-tier for news, politics, sports, and breaking events. - Very strong editorial credibility. 5. **AFP Forum** - Good global editorial coverage, especially international news and politics. 6. **Shutterstock Editorial** - Broad selection and easier workflow than some agency-only options. - Good for publishers and marketers needing editorial-safe content. 7. **iStock Editorial** - More affordable than Getty, with decent editorial depth. - Best for smaller budgets. 8. **Adobe Stock Editorial** - Convenient if you already use Adobe tools and want integrated licensing. **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Getty Images - **Best value/breadth:** Alamy - **Best breaking news:** Reuters Connect or AP Images - **Best budget option:** iStock Editorial or Shutterstock Editorial If you want, I can also rank them for **price**, **quality**, or **news coverage**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **editorial images**: 1. **Getty Images** — strongest overall for news, sports, entertainment, and high-profile editorial coverage. 2. **Alamy** — excellent for broad editorial variety, including news, travel, and niche subjects. 3. **Shutterstock Editorial** — good volume and easy search for newsworthy editorial content. 4. **AP Images** — top choice for journalism and breaking news if you need wire-quality coverage. 5. **Reuters Connect** — very strong for global news, business, and finance editorial imagery. 6. **Adobe Stock Editorial** — solid option if you want editorial content alongside creative stock in one platform. 7. **iStock Editorial** — useful, but generally less premium than Getty. 8. **Pond5 News** — good for editorial video and some photo content, especially multimedia projects. If you want the short answer: **Getty Images, Alamy, AP Images, and Reuters Connect** are usually the best picks for serious editorial work. If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **quality**, or **licensing flexibility**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for royalty-free photos? 33,100/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best stock photo marketplaces for **royalty-free photos**: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best overall quality and search tools 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, great for broad commercial use 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — strong editorial + premium commercial options 4. **Envato Elements** — best value if you need photos plus templates/assets 5. **Depositphotos** — solid mid-tier pricing and decent selection 6. **Dreamstime** — good budget option with flexible licensing 7. **Alamy** — large, diverse catalog, especially for niche/real-world images 8. **Pond5** — known for video, but also offers stock photos Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best for volume:** Shutterstock - **Best budget/value:** Envato Elements or Depositphotos - **Best premium/editorial:** Getty Images/iStock Note: “Royalty-free” doesn’t mean free—it usually means a one-time license fee for broad reuse. Always check the specific license for commercial use, model releases, and restrictions.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best stock photo marketplaces for royalty-free photos: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall quality and integration with Creative Cloud. Strong for commercial use. 2. **Shutterstock** Huge library, very reliable, good for broad business and editorial-style needs. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Premium options and strong exclusive content. Great if you want higher-end visuals. 4. **Envato Elements** Best value if you need lots of assets. Subscription includes photos, graphics, video, and more. 5. **Depositphotos** Affordable and solid selection, especially for marketing and web use. 6. **Alamy** Massive, diverse catalog. Good for niche, authentic, and location-specific images. 7. **Dreamstime** Budget-friendly with a wide variety of standard stock photos. 8. **Freepik** Good if you also want vectors, templates, and stock photos in one place. If you want the **best paid marketplace**, I’d pick **Adobe Stock** or **Shutterstock**. If you want **best value**, go with **Envato Elements**. Note: “royalty-free” means you usually pay once and can use the image multiple times under the license, but it does **not** mean free or unrestricted. Always check each site’s license terms.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top royalty-free stock photo marketplaces: 1. **Adobe Stock** — Huge library, strong quality, great for commercial use. 2. **Shutterstock** — One of the largest selections; good search tools and broad coverage. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** — Solid curated collection; good if you want premium-looking images. 4. **Getty Images** — Best known for editorial and premium commercial stock; pricier than most. 5. **Depositphotos** — Good value, lots of business and lifestyle images. 6. **Envato Elements** — Best if you want a subscription with photos plus graphics, templates, and video. 7. **Dreamstime** — Affordable and broad; useful for smaller budgets. 8. **Alamy** — Massive variety, including niche and editorial content. 9. **Pond5** — Strong for media buyers who also need video, music, and images. 10. **Canva Pro Photos** — Convenient if you already design in Canva; easy workflow. **Best overall:** Adobe Stock or Shutterstock **Best budget/value:** Depositphotos or Envato Elements **Best premium/editorial:** Getty Images or Alamy If you want, I can also rank these for **price**, **image quality**, or **best licensing for commercial use**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best stock photo marketplaces for **royalty-free photos**: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for quality + integration with Photoshop/Creative Cloud. Strong search and broad commercial selection. 2. **Shutterstock** Best for huge variety and consistency. One of the largest libraries, good for business, editorial-style, and lifestyle images. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** Best for premium-curated images at a lower price than Getty proper. Good if you want more polished, less generic stock. 4. **Getty Images** Best for top-tier premium/editorial and brand-safe content. Usually more expensive, but excellent quality. 5. **Envato Elements** Best value if you need stock photos plus templates, video, and graphics. Subscription-based and very cost-effective for creators. 6. **Depositphotos** Good mid-range option with a solid library and frequent discounts. Useful for marketing teams and small businesses. 7. **Dreamstime** Good budget-friendly marketplace with a wide range of contributors and flexible licensing options. 8. **Alamy** Best for niche, unusual, and editorial content. Great if you need something less “stocky.” 9. **123RF** Budget-friendly with a decent library. Good for simple commercial use on a smaller budget. 10. **Pexels / Unsplash** Best free options. Great for basic needs, but selection is less curated and many images are widely used. **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best library size:** Shutterstock - **Best premium:** Getty Images - **Best value:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **quality**, or **best for commercial use**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top royalty-free stock photo marketplaces: 1. **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong search, consistent commercial-quality photos. 2. **Adobe Stock** — great integration with Creative Cloud, solid premium images. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — excellent for high-end and editorial-style commercial imagery. 4. **Depositphotos** — good value, broad selection, flexible subscription options. 5. **Envato Elements** — best if you want an all-in-one subscription for photos, graphics, templates. 6. **Dreamstime** — budget-friendly with a large catalog. 7. **Freepik** — useful for stock photos plus vectors and design assets. 8. **Pond5** — strong for media libraries, especially if you also need video. If you want the simplest “best overall” picks: - **Shutterstock** for selection - **Adobe Stock** for quality + workflow - **Depositphotos** for affordability If you want, I can also rank them by **price, image quality, or best for commercial use**.
Which stock photo marketplaces do professionals use most?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most-used stock photo marketplaces by professionals are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** — very popular with designers because it integrates directly with Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign. 2. **Shutterstock** — one of the biggest general-purpose libraries; heavily used in marketing and publishing. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — common for premium editorial and commercial use. Getty is higher-end; iStock is the budget arm. 4. **Alamy** — widely used for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images. 5. **Envato Elements** — popular with agencies and creators who want flat-rate access to photos plus graphics/templates. 6. **Depositphotos** — often used by small businesses and agencies looking for affordable licensing. 7. **Dreamstime** — still used, though less dominant than Adobe/Shutterstock/Getty. If you want the short answer: **Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, and Getty Images** are the big three most professionals recognize and use most often.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Professionals most often use these stock photo marketplaces: - **Adobe Stock** — very popular for creatives because it’s built into Adobe apps. - **Shutterstock** — one of the biggest all-around libraries for commercial work. - **Getty Images** — strong for premium/editorial content and brand campaigns. - **iStock** — Getty’s lower-cost option, common for business and marketing needs. - **Alamy** — widely used for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find imagery. - **Envato Elements** — popular with designers for broad subscription access. - **Depositphotos** — common budget-friendly option for agencies and small businesses. - **Dreamstime** — still used by some professionals, though less dominant than the big three. If you want the most “professional standard” choices, start with **Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, and Getty Images**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Professionals most often use: - **Adobe Stock** — very common for designers and agencies, good integration with Creative Cloud. - **Shutterstock** — one of the biggest and most widely used. - **Getty Images / iStock** — strong for premium editorial and commercial licensing. - **Alamy** — popular for editorial, news, and hard-to-find images. - **Depositphotos** — budget-friendly, widely used by marketers and small teams. - **Envato Elements** — good for subscription-based creative assets. - **123RF** — another common budget stock option. If you want the **most professional mainstream picks**, start with **Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, and Getty/iStock**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Most professionals usually use these stock photo marketplaces: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best all-around choice for designers and creative teams. Strong library, easy licensing, and great if you already use Adobe apps. 2. **Shutterstock** Very popular for volume, variety, and fast search. Common for marketing teams, agencies, and publishers. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Used a lot for premium editorial, commercial, and high-end brand work. Getty is the premium side; iStock is the more affordable option. 4. **Alamy** Popular with editors, researchers, and content teams who need unusual, editorial, or niche images. 5. **Stocksy** Favored by creatives who want more authentic, art-directed, less “generic” imagery. 6. **Depositphotos** Budget-friendly and widely used for standard business/marketing needs. If you want the shortest answer: **Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, and Getty Images are the most commonly used by professionals.** If you want, I can also rank them by **best for agencies, best for small businesses, or best value**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most commonly used stock photo marketplaces by professionals are: 1. **Adobe Stock** — very popular for designers and agencies, especially if they use Creative Cloud. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong search, widely used across marketing and publishing. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — common for editorial, premium, and enterprise licensing. 4. **Alamy** — often used for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find imagery. 5. **Depositphotos** — popular with small businesses and budget-conscious teams. 6. **Envato Elements** — widely used by creators who want a subscription for photos + graphics + templates. If you want the shortest “pro default” answer: **Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, and Getty Images** are the big three most professionals know and use. If you want, I can also rank them by **quality, price, or licensing ease**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for agencies?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For agencies, the strongest stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best all-around for integration with Creative Cloud and broad commercial use 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, fast search, reliable for high-volume licensing 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — premium editorial + commercial options; strong for brand-safe content 4. **Alamy** — great for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find imagery 5. **Stocksy** — high-end, more curated, good if you want a more distinctive look 6. **Pond5** — especially strong for video, motion graphics, and multimedia assets 7. **Envato Elements** — good for agencies that need lots of assets beyond photos (templates, graphics, video) If you want the **best overall for agencies**, I’d shortlist: - **Adobe Stock** for workflow - **Shutterstock** for breadth - **Getty Images/iStock** for premium content If you tell me whether you mean **buying stock** or **selling your agency’s images**, I can narrow it to the best 3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For agencies, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best overall for quality, licensing ease, and Creative Cloud integration. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong search, good for broad commercial campaigns. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — best for premium editorial and high-end commercial imagery. 4. **Alamy** — great for niche, editorial, and less “stock-looking” content. 5. **Depositphotos** — solid budget-friendly option with decent breadth. 6. **Envato Elements** — excellent if you want a subscription for stock photos plus video, templates, and graphics. 7. **123RF** — inexpensive and useful for volume buying. 8. **Dreamstime** — good mid-tier option with flexible pricing. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Premium clients:** Adobe Stock, Getty Images - **General agency use:** Shutterstock, Adobe Stock - **Budget/high-volume:** Depositphotos, 123RF, Dreamstime - **Niche/editorial:** Alamy If you want, I can also rank them by **price, quality, licensing simplicity, or AI search tools**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For agencies, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for quality, integration, and clean licensing. Great if your team uses Creative Cloud. 2. **Shutterstock** Huge library, strong search, and good enterprise options. Often the default choice for agencies. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium/editorial and high-end brand work. More expensive, but strong image quality. 4. **Alamy** Good for niche, editorial, and hard-to-find images. Useful when you need variety beyond the big libraries. 5. **Depositphotos** Strong value for agencies with high volume needs. Good subscription and credit plans. 6. **Dreamstime** Budget-friendly and broad enough for general commercial use. Good as a secondary source. 7. **Envato Elements** Best if you also need templates, graphics, video, and fonts—not just photos. Great for content-heavy teams. ### Best picks by agency need - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best for volume:** Shutterstock - **Best premium/editorial:** Getty Images - **Best budget/value:** Depositphotos - **Best for mixed creative assets:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank these for **enterprise licensing**, **pricing**, or **image quality**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For agencies, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for breadth + integration with Creative Cloud. Strong licensing, good search, lots of commercial-safe content. 2. **Shutterstock** Huge library, fast turnaround, reliable for ad/marketing work. Good for teams that need lots of options across photo, video, and vectors. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium/editorial-quality imagery and bigger-brand campaigns. More expensive, but strong for high-end clients. 4. **Envato Elements** Great value if you need more than photos—also templates, graphics, video, fonts. Best for agencies producing lots of content at scale. 5. **Depositphotos** Solid mid-market option with competitive pricing and decent library size. Often a good balance of cost and quality. 6. **Alamy** Good for hard-to-find, niche, and editorial imagery. Useful when you need something less generic. 7. **Pond5** Best known for video, but also useful for stock photos and audio. Good if your agency needs mixed media. 8. **Freepik** Strong for design assets, illustrations, mockups, and some photos. Useful for social/content teams more than premium ad campaigns. ### Best picks by agency need - **Best all-around:** Adobe Stock - **Best premium:** Getty Images - **Best budget/value:** Shutterstock or Depositphotos - **Best for high-volume content teams:** Envato Elements - **Best for niche/editorial:** Alamy If you want, I can also rank them by **price, image quality, or licensing safety** for agency work.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For agencies, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best all-around choice. Huge library, strong commercial licensing, and it integrates well with Creative Cloud. 2. **Shutterstock** Great for volume, fast search, and broad editorial/commercial coverage. Very agency-friendly. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium imagery and editorial quality. Getty is top-tier; iStock is the more budget-friendly option. 4. **Alamy** Excellent for niche, hard-to-find, and editorial content. Good if you need variety beyond the big two. 5. **Envato Elements** Best for agencies that need a lot of assets for a subscription price. Useful if you want photos plus templates, video, and graphics. 6. **Depositphotos** Solid mid-range option with flexible pricing and decent commercial selection. If you want the short answer: - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best for scale:** Shutterstock - **Best premium/editorial:** Getty Images - **Best for niche coverage:** Alamy - **Best value subscription:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them specifically for **pricing, licensing safety, or image quality**.
Which stock photo marketplace is best overall?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Adobe Stock.** Why it wins for most people: - Strong quality and huge catalog - Best integration if you use **Photoshop**, **Illustrator**, **InDesign**, or **Express** - Simple licensing and good search - Great for teams and recurring commercial use **Good alternatives by need:** - **Shutterstock** — biggest “all-around” competitor; excellent search and volume - **iStock** — better if you want lower-cost premium content - **Getty Images** — best for high-end editorial/brand work, but pricier - **Alamy** — strong for editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images If you want one default choice, I’d pick **Adobe Stock**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Adobe Stock.** Why it wins: - strong quality control - huge library - great licensing for commercial use - seamless if you use Adobe Creative Cloud - often better “usable” results than pure volume-focused sites **Runner-up:** **Shutterstock** Best if you want the largest all-purpose library and very broad coverage. **If you want premium/editorial:** **Getty Images** **If you want budget:** **Depositphotos** or **iStock** If you want, I can also rank them by **price, quality, or best for commercial projects**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Adobe Stock** Why it’s usually the best all-around choice: - **Huge, high-quality library** - **Strong search and licensing** - **Best fit for designers and marketers** - **Seamless with Photoshop, Illustrator, and Creative Cloud** If you want the best by use case: - **Adobe Stock** — best overall - **Shutterstock** — best for sheer volume and enterprise teams - **iStock by Getty Images** — good premium/editorial selection - **Envato Elements** — best value if you need stock photos plus templates/assets - **Alamy** — best for niche, editorial, and unusual images If you want, I can also give you the **best stock photo marketplace for small businesses**, **lowest cost**, or **best for commercial licensing**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
**Adobe Stock** is the best **overall** for most buyers and creators. Why: - Huge, high-quality library - Strong search and licensing clarity - Best fit if you already use **Adobe Creative Cloud** (Photoshop, Illustrator, etc.) - Good mix of photos, vectors, templates, and video If you want alternatives: - **Shutterstock**: best for very broad selection and fast bulk licensing - **Getty Images / iStock**: best for premium editorial and higher-end commercial use - **Envato Elements**: best value if you need stock plus design assets on subscription - **Depositphotos**: solid budget-friendly option **Short answer:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best budget value:** Depositphotos or Envato Elements - **Best premium/editorial:** Getty Images If you want, I can also rank them by **price, quality, or licensing flexibility**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Adobe Stock.** Why it’s the best all-around: - Huge library with strong quality - Great search and filtering - Best choice if you use **Photoshop, Illustrator, or Express** - Easy licensing and generally good commercial usage support **Good alternatives by use case:** - **Shutterstock** — best if you want the biggest mainstream selection - **iStock by Getty Images** — strong premium/editorial feel - **Envato Elements** — best value if you need stock photos plus templates, video, and graphics - **Alamy** — good for niche, editorial, and unusual images - **Depositphotos** — solid budget-friendly option If you want one pick with the best balance of quality, workflow, and licensing, go with **Adobe Stock**.
What are the leading stock photo marketplaces for licensing images?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The leading stock photo marketplaces are: - **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong search, widely used for commercial licensing - **Adobe Stock** — great for creatives, integrates with Photoshop/Illustrator - **Getty Images** — premium editorial and commercial imagery - **iStock by Getty Images** — lower-cost Getty option - **Alamy** — very large, especially good for editorial and niche content - **Dreamstime** — broad selection, budget-friendly subscriptions and credits - **Depositphotos** — popular for affordable commercial stock assets - **123RF** — mid-market option with images, vectors, and video - **Envato Elements** — subscription-based, more than just photos - **Pond5** — especially strong for video, but also offers photos If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image quality**, or **best for commercial use**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The leading stock photo marketplaces are: - **Adobe Stock** — one of the biggest and best-integrated options for commercial licensing. - **Shutterstock** — huge library, strong for businesses and agencies. - **Getty Images** — premium editorial and commercial imagery, often higher-end pricing. - **iStock by Getty Images** — more affordable branch of Getty, popular for budget buyers. - **Alamy** — large, diverse collection, strong editorial and niche content. - **Dreamstime** — broad marketplace with competitive pricing and contributor-friendly options. - **Depositphotos** — widely used for affordable stock licensing. - **123RF** — solid mid-market option with flexible pricing. - **Envato Elements** — subscription-based, includes photos plus other creative assets. - **Pond5** — especially strong for video, but also licenses photos and other media. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for commercial use**, **best for contributors**, or **cheapest licensing**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The leading stock photo marketplaces for licensing images are: - **Shutterstock** — one of the largest libraries and a top choice for broad commercial use. - **Adobe Stock** — strong integration with Creative Cloud; popular with designers and agencies. - **Getty Images** — premium editorial and commercial imagery, often higher-end pricing. - **iStock by Getty Images** — more budget-friendly option from Getty, with both royalty-free and premium content. - **Alamy** — very large, diverse library, especially good for editorial and niche subjects. - **Depositphotos** — competitive pricing and a solid all-around stock library. - **Dreamstime** — long-running marketplace with a wide range of images and affordable plans. - **123RF** — budget-friendly, with a mix of photos, vectors, and illustrations. - **Envato Elements** — subscription-based access to stock assets, including photos, graphics, and video. - **Stocksy** — curated, artist-driven marketplace known for distinctive, high-quality imagery. If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **quality**, or **best for commercial licensing**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The leading stock photo marketplaces for licensing images are: - **Shutterstock** — one of the biggest, broadest libraries - **Adobe Stock** — strong integration with Creative Cloud - **Getty Images** — premium/editorial-focused, high-end licensing - **iStock by Getty Images** — more budget-friendly Getty option - **Alamy** — large, diverse collection, good for niche/editorial - **Depositphotos** — popular mid-market marketplace - **Dreamstime** — broad commercial stock library - **123RF** — affordable, large global catalog - **Pond5** — especially strong for video, also photos - **Canva Photos / Canva Pro content** — convenient for creators using Canva If you want, I can also rank these by **price, image quality, or best for commercial use**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The leading stock photo marketplaces are: - **Shutterstock** — one of the largest and most widely used libraries - **Adobe Stock** — strong for creatives, integrated with Adobe apps - **Getty Images** — premium/editorial and commercial licensing - **iStock** — Getty’s lower-cost marketplace - **Alamy** — broad collection, popular for editorial and niche images - **Depositphotos** — large budget-friendly stock library - **Dreamstime** — long-running marketplace with flexible pricing - **123RF** — affordable, with photos, vectors, and video - **Pond5** — especially strong for video, but also images - **Envato Elements** — subscription-based licensing for creatives If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **image quality**, or **best for commercial use**.
Which stock photo marketplaces have the best quality images?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For the **best overall image quality**, these stock marketplaces are usually top-tier: 1. **Getty Images / iStock** - Best for: premium, highly curated editorial and commercial imagery - Quality: excellent, especially Getty’s editorial and iStock’s premium collections 2. **Adobe Stock** - Best for: polished commercial stock, strong search, consistent quality - Quality: very high, with fewer junk results than many competitors 3. **Alamy** - Best for: editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images - Quality: mixed by contributor, but the best files are excellent and often very high-res 4. **Stocksy** - Best for: art-directed, modern, authentic lifestyle imagery - Quality: one of the best-curated libraries; very consistently strong 5. **Offset (by Shutterstock)** - Best for: premium creative and commercial work - Quality: very high, more boutique feel than standard Shutterstock **Also worth checking:** - **Shutterstock** — huge library, quality varies more, but the best content is solid - **Depositphotos** — decent, but less consistently premium than the names above If you want the **single best for quality**, I’d start with **Stocksy**, **Adobe Stock**, and **Getty Images**. If you want, I can also rank them by **quality for commercial ads**, **editorial use**, or **best value**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you care most about **image quality**, these usually stand out: 1. **Getty Images / iStock** - Best for: premium editorial, celebrity/news, high-end commercial use - Quality: consistently top-tier, especially Getty’s curated collection 2. **Adobe Stock** - Best for: clean commercial imagery, design-friendly assets - Quality: very strong overall, with good curation and modern styles 3. **Alamy** - Best for: editorial, niche, and hard-to-find images - Quality: mixed volume, but many excellent high-res files 4. **Stocksy** - Best for: authentic, artistic, premium lifestyle images - Quality: one of the best-curated creative libraries 5. **Offset (by Shutterstock)** - Best for: premium, art-directed photography - Quality: very high, but smaller and pricier 6. **Westend61** - Best for: polished European-style commercial imagery - Quality: strong curation and consistently professional work **Best overall for quality:** - **Stocksy** for creative/lifestyle - **Getty Images** for premium/editorial - **Adobe Stock** for all-around commercial quality If you want, I can also rank them by **best quality for business, lifestyle, editorial, or budget**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For **best overall image quality**, these are the top stock photo marketplaces: 1. **Stocksy** — probably the **best-curated** for premium, authentic, artistic lifestyle images. 2. **Getty Images / iStock Signature** — very strong for **commercial, editorial, and high-end** photography. 3. **Adobe Stock** — excellent **overall quality**, especially for clean, modern commercial imagery. 4. **Offset (by Shutterstock)** — premium, curated collection with **high-end creative** work. 5. **Alamy** — huge library, with some very high-quality editorial and niche images. If you want the short version: - **Best premium quality:** **Stocksy** - **Best for corporate/commercial:** **Adobe Stock** - **Best for editorial/newsworthy:** **Getty Images** - **Best budget-to-quality balance:** **Shutterstock** If you want, I can also rank them by **quality, price, licensing flexibility, or image style**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best image quality**, these marketplaces are usually the top tier: 1. **Stocksy** — often the best overall for artistic, authentic, high-end lifestyle imagery. 2. **Offset by Shutterstock** — premium, carefully curated collections; very polished. 3. **Adobe Stock** — strong quality and consistency, especially for commercial use. 4. **Getty Images / iStock** — huge catalog; Getty is higher-end, iStock is more mixed but still solid. 5. **Alamy** — great for editorial and niche subjects; quality varies, but many excellent images. 6. **Creative Market** — good for stylized, design-forward stock and creative assets. **Best pick by type:** - **Premium lifestyle/editorial:** Stocksy - **Corporate/commercial:** Adobe Stock - **High-end editorial/news:** Getty Images - **Niche or unusual content:** Alamy If you want, I can also rank them for **price**, **licensing**, or **best value**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best overall image quality**, these marketplaces usually lead: 1. **Stocksy** — often the best for curated, modern, authentic-looking photography. 2. **Getty Images** — top-tier editorial and commercial quality; very strong selection. 3. **Adobe Stock** — broad library, generally high quality, easy licensing. 4. **Offset (by Shutterstock)** — premium, highly curated images; quality over quantity. 5. **Alamy** — huge range, including excellent high-res images, but quality is less uniform. **Best picks by use case:** - **Premium creative/editorial:** Stocksy, Getty Images - **Commercial + broad choice:** Adobe Stock - **Curated high-end stock:** Offset - **Large archive with good finds:** Alamy If you want, I can also rank them for **natural-looking lifestyle photos**, **business/tech images**, or **best value**.
What are the best stock photo marketplaces for marketing teams?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For marketing teams, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for teams using Creative Cloud. Great search, strong commercial library, and smooth workflow in Photoshop/Illustrator/InDesign. 2. **Shutterstock** Excellent for breadth, speed, and campaign-ready assets. Very strong for marketing, social, and editorial-style visuals. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium, brand-safe imagery. Getty is top-tier for high-end campaigns; iStock is the more budget-friendly option. 4. **Envato Elements** Great value for teams that need photos plus templates, graphics, and video under one subscription. Especially good for content-heavy marketing teams. 5. **Depositphotos** Solid mid-market option with good pricing and a large library. Often a good fit for small-to-mid-sized teams. 6. **Alamy** Good if you need more authentic, less “stocky” imagery and niche subjects. Search isn’t as polished, but the catalog is broad. 7. **Unsplash+** Best for quick, modern visuals and lighter-budget projects. Good quality, but less ideal for stricter brand-control or highly specific campaign needs. **Best picks by use case** - **Most teams:** Adobe Stock - **Largest selection:** Shutterstock - **Premium brand campaigns:** Getty Images - **Best value bundle:** Envato Elements - **Budget-friendly alternative:** Depositphotos If you want, I can also rank them by **price, quality, licensing safety, and team collaboration features**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For marketing teams, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best for: strong quality, seamless Creative Cloud workflow, broad commercial licensing. 2. **Shutterstock** Best for: huge library, fast searching, lots of marketing-friendly content, good for scale. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for: premium editorial-style visuals and higher-end brand campaigns. - **iStock** is the more budget-friendly option inside Getty. 4. **Envato Elements** Best for: teams that need **photos + templates + graphics + video** under one subscription. 5. **Depositphotos** Best for: affordable licensing and decent variety for everyday marketing use. 6. **Alamy** Best for: niche, unusual, or editorial images that are harder to find elsewhere. **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best library size:** Shutterstock - **Best premium brand feel:** Getty Images - **Best value bundle:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them by **pricing**, **licensing simplicity**, or **best for social media ads vs. web vs. print**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For marketing teams, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best for teams already using Creative Cloud. Strong search, easy licensing, and great integration with Photoshop, Illustrator, and Express. 2. **Shutterstock** Best overall for breadth and volume. Huge library, strong enterprise/team tools, and reliable for campaigns across channels. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium, editorial, and higher-end brand work. More expensive, but strong if you need polished, recognizable visuals. 4. **Envato Elements** Best value for teams that need more than photos. One subscription covers stock photos, graphics, video, templates, and fonts. 5. **Alamy** Best for niche, authentic, and editorial-style images. Good when you need less “stocky” content. 6. **Canva Pro** Best for small marketing teams that want stock plus design workflow in one place. Convenient, though image selection is less robust than Adobe Stock or Shutterstock. **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Shutterstock - **Best for Adobe users:** Adobe Stock - **Best premium option:** Getty Images - **Best budget value:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them for **pricing, licensing, or team collaboration features**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For marketing teams, the best stock photo marketplaces are usually: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best all-around for quality, search, and seamless use in Adobe apps. Great for ads, web, and brand work. 2. **Shutterstock** Huge library, strong commercial content, and good for teams that need lots of variety fast. Solid enterprise tools. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium, editorial-style, and higher-end brand campaigns. Getty is pricier; iStock is the more budget-friendly option. 4. **Envato Elements** Excellent value if you need stock photos plus templates, graphics, video, and fonts. Great for lean marketing teams. 5. **Depositphotos** Good mid-range option with flexible licensing and a broad collection. Often cheaper than the biggest players. 6. **Canva Pro** Not a pure stock marketplace, but very practical for marketing teams that want stock photos built into a design workflow. 7. **Pexels / Unsplash** Best for free, simple-use imagery. Good for internal content, blogs, and low-budget projects, but less ideal for premium brand campaigns. **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best for scale:** Shutterstock - **Best premium:** Getty Images - **Best value bundle:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them by **price, licensing safety, or image quality**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top stock photo marketplaces for marketing teams: 1. **Adobe Stock** Best overall for creative teams already using Adobe tools. Huge library, solid commercial licenses, easy Photoshop/Illustrator integration. 2. **Shutterstock** Great for breadth and speed. Strong search, lots of business/marketing-friendly imagery, good for campaigns and social content. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** Best for premium editorial-style and higher-end brand visuals. More expensive, but strong if quality and brand polish matter. 4. **Envato Elements** Best value for teams needing more than photos—also templates, graphics, video, and fonts. Great for ongoing content production. 5. **Depositphotos** Good mid-range option with flexible subscriptions and a broad commercial library. Often a practical budget choice. 6. **123RF** Affordable and straightforward for smaller marketing teams needing lots of everyday assets. 7. **Alamy** Strong for niche, authentic, or less “stocky” imagery. Useful when you need something more unique. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best overall:** Adobe Stock - **Best for volume:** Shutterstock - **Best premium:** Getty Images - **Best value bundle:** Envato Elements If you want, I can also rank them by **pricing**, **license clarity**, or **best for social ads vs. website content**.
Which stock photo marketplaces offer the widest variety of photos?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The widest variety is usually found on these stock photo marketplaces: 1. **Shutterstock** — one of the largest libraries overall; very broad coverage across business, lifestyle, editorial, and niche topics. 2. **Adobe Stock** — huge, high-quality collection, especially strong for creative, commercial, and modern imagery. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — Getty is strong for premium/editorial; **iStock** offers a very large commercial library at lower prices. 4. **Alamy** — known for massive diversity, including unusual, editorial, historical, and hard-to-find images. 5. **Depositphotos** — large, broad collection with lots of commercial stock and decent niche variety. 6. **Dreamstime** — big library with a wide mix of standard and niche subjects. If you want the **widest overall variety**, I’d start with **Shutterstock**, **Adobe Stock**, and **Alamy**. If you want, I can also rank them by **quality**, **price**, or **best for commercial use**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The widest variety is usually on the biggest general marketplaces: - **Adobe Stock** — very broad, strong for commercial, editorial-style, and creative imagery - **Shutterstock** — one of the largest libraries overall, huge range across nearly every category - **Getty Images / iStock** — especially strong for premium, editorial, news, and business content - **Alamy** — massive, very diverse collection, especially good for niche, editorial, and hard-to-find images - **Depositphotos** — broad mainstream stock selection with a good mix of photos, vectors, and illustrations If you want the **largest overall selection**, start with **Shutterstock** and **Adobe Stock**. If you want the **most diverse / niche coverage**, **Alamy** is often the best extra check.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The widest variety usually comes from the biggest, most established libraries: 1. **Shutterstock** — one of the largest overall; very broad mix of commercial, editorial, lifestyle, business, and niche images. 2. **Adobe Stock** — huge collection, especially strong for high-quality modern commercial imagery and integration with Creative Cloud. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — Getty is strongest for premium/editorial; iStock is the more affordable sister site with a broad library. 4. **Alamy** — known for a very large, diverse catalog, including unusual, editorial, and hard-to-find images. 5. **Depositphotos** — large and broad, good mix of stock, vectors, and video. 6. **Dreamstime** — sizable library with lots of varied contributors and niche content. 7. **123RF** — broad selection, especially if you want lots of affordable options. **If you want the single widest variety overall:** - **Shutterstock** and **Adobe Stock** are usually the best starting points. - **Alamy** is great if you want more unusual or less “stock-looking” options. If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **quality**, or **best for editorial vs commercial use**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The biggest stock photo marketplaces with the widest variety are usually: 1. **Shutterstock** — huge overall catalog, especially strong for commercial, editorial, and modern lifestyle imagery. 2. **Adobe Stock** — very broad, well-curated library, especially good if you use Adobe apps. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — massive combined reach; Getty for premium/editorial, iStock for cheaper commercial stock. 4. **Alamy** — one of the widest and most eclectic libraries, especially for editorial, travel, and hard-to-find images. 5. **Depositphotos** — large, broad commercial collection with photos, vectors, and illustrations. 6. **Dreamstime** — very large variety, often with unusual or niche content. If you want the **widest possible selection overall**, start with **Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, Getty Images/iStock, and Alamy**. If you want, I can also rank them by **best quality**, **cheapest pricing**, or **best for editorial vs commercial use**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The widest photo variety is usually found on: 1. **Shutterstock** — very large, broadest mix for commercial stock, editorial, and creative images. 2. **Adobe Stock** — huge library, especially strong for modern business, lifestyle, and design-oriented content. 3. **Getty Images / iStock** — massive collection; Getty is strongest for premium/editorial, iStock for budget-friendly stock. 4. **Alamy** — one of the best for sheer diversity, especially niche, editorial, travel, and unusual subjects. 5. **Depositphotos** — broad general-stock library with lots of business, lifestyle, and web-friendly images. 6. **Dreamstime** — large and varied, often good for lower-cost options. 7. **123RF** — wide selection across many categories, especially if you want a value option. If you want the single best answer for “widest variety,” I’d start with **Shutterstock**, **Adobe Stock**, and **Alamy**.
What stock photo marketplaces should I try first?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Try these first: 1. **Adobe Stock** — strong demand, easy contributor setup, good for commercial/licensing. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge buyer base, solid volume, good if you have lots of varied content. 3. **iStock / Getty Images** — better for premium work; harder to get accepted, but can pay well. 4. **Alamy** — good for editorial, niche, and unusual images; less saturated. 5. **Depositphotos** — easier entry, decent for broader stock portfolios. 6. **Dreamstime** — smaller, but simple to start with and useful as a secondary channel. If you shoot video too, also try **Pond5**. Best starting combo: **Adobe Stock + Shutterstock + Alamy**. If you want, I can rank them by **payout**, **ease of acceptance**, or **best for beginners**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Start with these first: 1. **Adobe Stock** — big buyer base, easy if you already use Adobe tools. 2. **Shutterstock** — one of the largest, solid volume, good for broad commercial shots. 3. **iStock / Getty Images** — stronger for higher-end/editorial-style licensing. 4. **Alamy** — good if you have niche, editorial, or unusual content. 5. **Depositphotos** — easier entry point, decent for building momentum. If you want to test **royalty-free microstock**, start with **Adobe Stock + Shutterstock + Depositphotos**. If your work is more premium/editorial, try **Getty/iStock + Alamy** first. If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of acceptance**, **earnings potential**, or **best for AI-generated vs. real photos**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Try these first: 1. **Adobe Stock** — strong buyer traffic, easy if you already use Adobe tools. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge marketplace, good for volume. 3. **iStock / Getty Images** — more selective, but solid for premium content. 4. **Alamy** — good for editorial, niche, and less “stocky” images. 5. **Dreamstime** — beginner-friendly and easy to upload. 6. **Depositphotos** — decent volume, often easier to get started on. 7. **123RF** — another broad marketplace worth testing. 8. **Canva Contributors** — good if your work fits social/media/design templates. If you want the best “start here” combo: **Adobe Stock + Shutterstock + Alamy**. If you tell me whether you shoot **photos, illustrations, or video**, I can rank them for your type of content.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Start with these first: 1. **Adobe Stock** — best all-around starter; strong buyer base and easy contributor workflow. 2. **Shutterstock** — huge volume, especially good for commercial/editorial-style content. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** — good if your work is polished and keyworded well. 4. **Alamy** — better for niche, editorial, or unusual images; often less saturated. 5. **Dreamstime** — easier to get accepted, decent as a secondary income stream. 6. **Depositphotos** — another solid volume marketplace with broad international reach. If you want the simplest first move: **Adobe Stock + Shutterstock**. If you want, I can also give you a **best-first-marketplaces list by photo type** (portraits, travel, food, AI-generated, editorial, etc.).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Start with these first: 1. **Adobe Stock** — strong buyer base, good for creative/professional images. 2. **Shutterstock** — biggest marketplace; good for volume and broad reach. 3. **iStock by Getty Images** — solid for commercial/editorial-style stock. 4. **Alamy** — better for niche, editorial, and less-saturated content. 5. **Dreamstime** — easier entry, decent for beginners. 6. **Depositphotos** — good extra channel; simple contributor setup. 7. **Pond5** — especially worth it if you also have video. If you want the shortest “start here” list: **Adobe Stock + Shutterstock + iStock**. If you tell me whether you shoot **photos, video, AI images, or illustrations**, I can rank the best marketplaces for your type.

All 72 prompts run for AGE Fotostock

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is AGE Fotostock known for?
  • 2 What are AGE Fotostock's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use AGE Fotostock? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does AGE Fotostock compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with AGE Fotostock?
  • 6 What is a typical stock photo marketplace known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for small businesses? discovery
  • 2 Which stock photo marketplaces are best for social media content? discovery
  • 3 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for blog and website images? discovery
  • 4 Which stock photo marketplaces are good for startup marketing? discovery
  • 5 What stock photo marketplaces are best for ecommerce product marketing? discovery
  • 6 Which stock photo marketplaces have strong business and office photos? discovery
  • 7 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for authentic lifestyle photos? discovery
  • 8 Which stock photo marketplaces are best for global teams needing diverse images? discovery
  • 9 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for high-resolution downloads? discovery
  • 10 Which stock photo marketplaces work well for presentations and reports? discovery
  • 11 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for editorial publishing? discovery
  • 12 Which stock photo marketplaces are best for creative campaigns? discovery
  • 13 What stock photo marketplaces are best for nonprofit marketing materials? discovery
  • 14 Which stock photo marketplaces are good for healthcare and medical content? discovery
  • 15 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for real estate listings? discovery
  • 16 Which stock photo marketplaces are best for remote work images? discovery
  • 17 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for seasonal marketing graphics? discovery
  • 18 Which stock photo marketplaces are best for technical and technology themes? discovery
  • 19 What stock photo marketplaces are best for diverse and inclusive imagery? discovery
  • 20 Which stock photo marketplaces are best for fast image licensing? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to premium stock photo marketplaces? comparison
  • 22 Which stock photo marketplaces are better than subscription-based image libraries? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to large royalty-free image libraries? comparison
  • 24 Which stock photo marketplaces are better for editorial licensing than generic image libraries? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to high-volume stock image platforms? comparison
  • 26 Which stock photo marketplaces are better for commercial licensing than free image sites? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to budget stock photo libraries? comparison
  • 28 Which stock photo marketplaces are better for curated images than massive libraries? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to enterprise image platforms? comparison
  • 30 Which stock photo marketplaces are better for unique imagery than common stock libraries? comparison
  • 31 How do I find stock photos that look less generic? problem
  • 32 How do I license images for commercial use legally? problem
  • 33 How do I find royalty-free photos for my website? problem
  • 34 How do I find editorial photos for news content? problem
  • 35 How do I get high-quality photos for marketing without a photographer? problem
  • 36 How do I avoid copyright issues when using stock images? problem
  • 37 How do I find images with diverse people for campaigns? problem
  • 38 How do I search for stock photos by industry or theme? problem
  • 39 How do I get consistent images for a brand design system? problem
  • 40 How do I download stock photos in the right size for print? problem
  • 41 How much do stock photo marketplaces cost? transactional
  • 42 Are there any free stock photo marketplaces? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest stock photo marketplace? transactional
  • 44 Do stock photo marketplaces offer monthly subscriptions? transactional
  • 45 Are there stock photo marketplaces with pay-per-download pricing? transactional
  • 46 What stock photo marketplaces have free trials? transactional
  • 47 How much do commercial stock photo licenses cost? transactional
  • 48 Which stock photo marketplaces are best value for money? transactional
  • 49 Do stock photo marketplaces have team plans? transactional
  • 50 Can I buy stock photos without a subscription? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for commercial use?
  • 2 Which stock photo marketplaces are most popular right now?
  • 3 What are the top stock photo marketplaces for businesses?
  • 4 Which stock photo marketplace has the best selection?
  • 5 What are the most recommended stock photo marketplaces?
  • 6 Which stock photo marketplaces are best for editorial images?
  • 7 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for royalty-free photos? 33,100/mo
  • 8 Which stock photo marketplaces do professionals use most?
  • 9 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for agencies?
  • 10 Which stock photo marketplace is best overall?
  • 11 What are the leading stock photo marketplaces for licensing images?
  • 12 Which stock photo marketplaces have the best quality images?
  • 13 What are the best stock photo marketplaces for marketing teams?
  • 14 Which stock photo marketplaces offer the widest variety of photos?
  • 15 What stock photo marketplaces should I try first?