AI Image Editing Tools in 2026
AI image generation (Midjourney, DALL-E, Flux) creates new images from prompts. AI image editing modifies existing images — upscaling, retouching, restyling, inpainting. Different category, different tools, different leaders.
We tested the four leading AI image editing tools on identical real-world tasks over 6 weeks. Here’s what each one does well.
TL;DR
| Job | Best tool |
|---|---|
| General photo editing with AI assists | Adobe Photoshop AI (Generative Fill, etc.) |
| Restyling / variation generation | Krea AI |
| Upscaling + enhancement | Magnific AI or Topaz Gigapixel |
| Old photo restoration | Topaz Photo AI |
| Free / experimental | Stable Diffusion + ControlNet (DIY) |
The four contenders
1. Adobe Photoshop with Firefly AI
Cost: Photoshop subscription ($23/mo standalone or via Adobe Creative Cloud bundles)
Best for: Professional photo editing with AI capabilities integrated into Photoshop
Key AI features (2026):
– Generative Fill — select an area, type a prompt, AI fills it
– Generative Expand — extend canvas, AI fills with believable content
– Object Remove — better than the older Spot Healing
– Generative AI for textures, backgrounds
– Neural Filters — preset AI transformations (Skin Smoothing, Style Transfer, etc.)
Strengths:
– Lives inside Photoshop — fits any existing workflow
– Trained on Adobe Stock (commercially safe for most use)
– Best UX for fine-tuned local edits
– Adobe maintains creator-aligned training data
– Excellent for combining AI-generated and manually-edited content
Weaknesses:
– Expensive (Photoshop subscription)
– AI generation quality slightly behind dedicated tools
– Generative Fill has size limits (works up to 1024px regions; bigger areas tile poorly)
2. Krea AI
Cost: Free tier (limited) | Pro $10/mo | Max $35/mo
Best for: Restyling existing images, generating variations
Key features:
– Real-time generation (you can stream-edit prompts and see results live)
– Strong “image variation” workflow
– Inpainting and outpainting
– Style transfer from reference images
– Multi-step “enhance/restyle” workflows
Strengths:
– Fast iteration cycle (real-time)
– Great for generating multiple variations of a hero image
– Good UX for non-Photoshop users
– Web-based (no install)
– Tile-based image building
Weaknesses:
– Standalone product (doesn’t integrate into Photoshop workflow)
– Best results require some prompt skill
– Pro tier needed for high-quality generations
3. Magnific AI
Cost: $10-200/mo depending on tier
Best for: Image upscaling with AI-driven detail enhancement
Key features:
– Upscale images 2x, 4x, 8x with hallucinated detail
– “Creativity” slider that controls how much new detail is added
– Multiple upscaling models per use case
Strengths:
– Best-in-class upscaling quality
– Adds plausible detail that wasn’t in the original (controversial but powerful)
– API for automation
– Web UI
Weaknesses:
– Expensive at higher volume
– The “creativity” feature isn’t pure restoration — it’s plausible invention
– Less suitable for “preserve the original photo” use cases (Topaz is better for that)
– Web-only
4. Topaz Photo AI
Cost: $199 one-time purchase (or upgrade discounts)
Best for: Photo restoration, denoising, sharpening
Key features:
– Denoise — remove noise from low-light photos
– Sharpen — sharpen blurry images
– Upscale — enlarge with detail preservation
– Face Recovery — improve faces in low-res images
– Old photo restoration
Strengths:
– One-time purchase (not subscription)
– Best for “fix this old/damaged photo”
– Strong preservation of original photo (doesn’t invent details aggressively)
– Plugin for Photoshop and Lightroom
– Standalone app for non-Adobe users
Weaknesses:
– Narrow feature set vs Photoshop AI
– Less “creative” — can’t generate new content
– Updates require paying for major version bumps
The benchmark
We ran 6 identical tasks through each tool:
- Remove a person from a landscape photo (inpainting)
- Extend a portrait to landscape format (outpainting)
- Upscale a 1080p product photo to 8K (upscaling)
- Denoise a low-light photo shot at ISO 12800 (denoising)
- Restore a 1950s family photo with damage (restoration)
- Restyle a landscape from “summer” to “winter” (restyling)
Results
| Task | Photoshop AI | Krea | Magnific | Topaz |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Remove person | 4.5/5 | 3.8 | 2.5 | 3.0 |
| Extend canvas | 4.4 | 4.2 | 2.5 | 2.5 |
| Upscale 8K | 4.0 | 3.5 | 4.7 | 4.4 |
| Denoise low-light | 3.5 | 2.5 | 3.0 | 4.6 |
| Restore old photo | 3.5 | 3.0 | 3.5 | 4.5 |
| Restyle scene | 3.8 | 4.5 | 3.0 | 2.5 |
Wins by category:
– Inpainting/outpainting: Photoshop AI
– Upscaling: Magnific AI (close: Topaz)
– Denoising: Topaz Photo AI
– Restoration: Topaz Photo AI
– Restyling: Krea AI
When to pick which
Pick Photoshop AI (with Firefly) if:
- You already use Photoshop
- You need fine-grained local edits
- You’re doing professional photo retouching
- AI generation is one part of a larger workflow
- Your work requires commercial-safe AI training data
Pick Krea if:
- You generate many variations of hero images
- You want real-time iteration
- You’re not in Adobe’s ecosystem
- Restyling is a major use case
Pick Magnific if:
- Upscaling is your primary need
- You want maximum quality regardless of cost
- You’re OK with the AI inventing plausible details
- You need API integration for automation
Pick Topaz Photo AI if:
- You’re restoring old/damaged photos
- You’re denoising real-world photography
- You want a one-time purchase, not subscription
- You prefer preservation over invention
The “all-in-one” question
Could one tool replace all four?
Photoshop AI comes closest. It has inpainting, outpainting, some upscaling, some denoising. But:
– Magnific beats Photoshop on extreme upscaling
– Topaz beats Photoshop on denoising
– Krea beats Photoshop on real-time restyling
Most professional users we know use 2-3 of these:
– Photoshop AI as primary
– Topaz for denoising and restoration
– Magnific or Krea for specific use cases
Total monthly: ~$50/mo for the full stack. Worth it for image-heavy professionals.
The DIY alternative: Stable Diffusion + ComfyUI
For technical users:
– Free Stable Diffusion models (Flux, SDXL) + ComfyUI
– Specific node combinations for inpainting, outpainting, upscaling, restoration
– Requires GPU (16GB+ for serious work) and learning curve
Pros: Free at marginal cost. Maximum control. Privacy (local).
Cons: Setup time (10+ hours to learn ComfyUI). Quality varies by your workflow design.
For volume work or privacy-sensitive use: DIY wins. For convenience: commercial tools.
What about Lightroom AI / Capture One AI?
Adobe Lightroom has its own AI features — Generative Remove, Lens Blur, Denoise. These are integrated into the Lightroom workflow. If you do RAW photography, Lightroom + its AI is the right tool, not Photoshop.
Capture One has limited AI features. Strong on color science (where it’s better than Lightroom) but lighter on AI.
For RAW photo workflows: Lightroom AI. For composited/finishing work: Photoshop AI.
What about Canva AI?
Canva integrates AI features into its design tool. For non-photographers doing social media or marketing graphics, Canva’s AI features (Magic Eraser, Background Remover, Text-to-Image) are convenient.
Quality is below Photoshop AI for serious work. For amateurs / casual users: Canva is the easier entry point.
What we use
The Benchmark AI Pick team:
– 3 use Photoshop AI as primary
– 2 use Topaz Photo AI alongside (for denoising)
– 1 uses Krea for specific restyling work
– 1 uses Magnific for specific upscaling needs
All five of us use multiple tools.
Disclosure
We use affiliate links for Adobe products and some others. Topaz Labs has a referral program. Krea and Magnific have referral programs. Commission doesn’t change our rankings. See our affiliate disclosure.
Last updated 2026 Q2. Tested over 6 weeks across the same 6 image tasks.