AI image editing fragmented productively in 2026. The "one tool to do everything" pitch never materialized; instead, specialized tools won at specialized jobs. Photoshop kept the throne for context-aware editing inside compositions, while a handful of newer tools out-do it for live iteration, generative fill at scale, and intelligent upscaling. Here's the field, by what each one is actually best at.
What changed in 2026
- Native diffusion editing converged with traditional pixel tools. Generative Fill stopped feeling like a separate mode — it's a brush now.
- Live editing went mainstream. Krea, Adobe Firefly, and Leonardo all support real-time updates as you paint or sketch.
- Upscaling matured into two distinct camps: preserving (Topaz) and hallucinating (Magnific). Pick the one that fits the photo.
The picks by task
Photoshop + Generative Fill / Expand. Still the most reliable tool for inserting, removing, or extending image content while respecting the surrounding context. The new "Generative Workspace" in Photoshop 2026 lets you iterate prompts and references without leaving the canvas.
Photoroom. Best for product, lifestyle, and brand-asset workflows. Cut subject → generate background → match lighting → export. Batches at speed. Pro tier ~$10/mo.
Krea. Real-time iteration is the killer feature. Drag in a reference, sketch on canvas, change the prompt — output updates instantly. Best for ideation and creative exploration.
Magnific. AI upscaling that adds plausible detail. A blurry 512px image becomes a 4K image that doesn't just look sharper — it has texture, fabric weave, hair, depth. Use carefully; it changes the image.
Topaz Gigapixel / Photo AI. AI upscaling that respects the original. Best for photographers who want sharper outputs without invented detail. The pick for archival, legal, or medical use cases.
Adobe Firefly Image 4. Strong free baseline for generative tasks. Best when you need a commercial-safe model with clear training provenance.
Krea Realtime / Comfy. The pro workflow many teams settled on — ComfyUI graphs for custom pipelines, Krea Realtime for instant iteration on top.
Tool fit by task
| Task |
Best tool |
| Remove object, fill context |
Photoshop Generative Fill |
| Extend canvas / outpaint |
Photoshop Generative Expand |
| Product photo background |
Photoroom |
| Creative ideation, live |
Krea |
| Upscale photo (hallucinate) |
Magnific |
| Upscale photo (preserve) |
Topaz Gigapixel |
| Generate from scratch |
Midjourney v7 / Firefly / Flux |
| Custom pipeline (pro) |
ComfyUI |
A workflow that actually scales
Most production work in 2026 looks like a small pipeline rather than a single tool:
- Generate or shoot the base image (Midjourney/Firefly/Flux, or a camera).
- Compose in Photoshop — masks, layers, generative fill for object adjustments.
- Polish in Photoroom for product, or Krea for creative.
- Upscale with Magnific (creative) or Topaz (photographic).
- Export to whatever the channel needs.
The mistake to avoid: trying to do everything in one tool. Each step has a clear winner; using the right one for each cuts total time by half.
What's still hard
- Hands and fine text. Improved but not solved. Inspect close-ups before publishing.
- Brand consistency across many images. Diffusion drifts. Use style references and seed locking.
- Photoreal edits to existing photos of real people. Identity preservation is decent but not perfect; legal/ethical concerns matter.
- Animated edits across video frames. Doable in Runway and Krea Video but expensive at scale.
FAQ
Do I still need Photoshop?
For serious image editing, yes. The new generative tools complement traditional masking and selection; they don't replace them.
What's the cheapest stack that's actually usable?
Adobe Firefly free + Photopea (free Photoshop alternative) + Topaz Photo AI ($200 one-time) — fully capable for most personal work.
Is Midjourney an editing tool?
Primarily a generator. Its inpaint and remix modes are good but Photoshop wins for editing existing photos.
Which upscaler hallucinates the least?
Topaz Gigapixel "Standard v2" mode. Use Magnific only when you want the AI to invent plausible detail.
Where to go next
For related material see How to remove the background from an image in 2026, Midjourney v7 prompting guide in 2026, and Flux Pro prompting guide in 2026.