Skip to main content

Google Photos’ best AI editing tools will soon be free for everyone

Magic Eraser on the Pixel 6.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

It seems like the unsavory Pixel 8-Gemini drama is bearing a lot of apologetic AI blessings. Remember the cool new features in Google Photos that used to arrive with Pixel Drop updates and remain exclusive to Google’s phones? Well, those tools are getting democratized and will soon be available to not just more Android phones — but to iPhones, as well.

Recommended Videos

The binding force (read: mandatory element) is the Google Photos app. Come May 15, exclusive features like Magic Eraser, Photo Unblur, and Portrait Light will expand to all Google Photos users — as long as your device meets certain hardware requirements. Here they are, in Google’s own words:

  • A Chromebook Plus with ChromeOS version 118+
  • A phone running Android 8.0 or iOS 15
  • Must have at least 3GB RAM

In case you missed the train, here’s a brief description of these editing niceties. The Magic Eraser tool lets you eliminate unwanted individuals or items from the background of an image. It’s not perfect, but there is not much of a learning curve either, and it gets the job done in most cases.

Magic Editor in action

Then we have Photo Unblur, which comes in handy for old photographs and proves especially useful for enhancing images captured with low-res image sensors on smartphones or digital cameras. Whether dealing with issues like motion blur, camera shake, mid-focus blur, or visual noise, Photo Unblur tries to enhance clarity in such photos.

Finally, we have Portrait Light, which essentially creates a simulated light source in the photos and employs artificial intelligence to add more visual highlights to the subject’s face. As long as there are four or fewer people in a photo, this feature works like a charm and brings the faces alive.

Magic Eraser feature in Google Photos.

Then we have more demanding features like Magic Editor, which makes heavy use of AI tricks to allow edits that otherwise wouldn’t be possible even with extensive Photoshop knowledge. This feature helps you with moving around objects in a picture, resizing, or eliminating items within your photo, adjusting colors, and even applying stylized effects to transform the overall image.

So far, this mode has been exclusive to Pixel 8 series phones. But now, it will be available on all Pixel smartphones, as long as they have 4GB RAM or more. If you don’t have a Pixel in your pocket, Google will still offer you a generous 10 Magic Editor saves each month. If you end up liking it too much, either get yourself a Pixel or buy a premium Google One plan that offers at least 2GB or more cloud storage.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech and science journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started…
Your Google Photos app is about to look different. Here’s what’s changing
The Google Photos app on the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold.

Google is implementing a small yet significant change to its popular Google Photos app. As first noted by 9to5Google, the app's "Memories" tab is being removed. Memories is an auto-organizing, scrapbook-like feature that utilizes artificial intelligence to create an AI-powered feed.

Since its release, the Memories tab has been in the bottom bar of the Google Photos app. The Memories tab is being replaced by Moments, which will reside inside the app's Collections tab. This is where you can find People & pets, Albums, Documents, and Places.

Read more
I compared Apple’s and Samsung’s AI photo editing tools. There’s a clear winner
The Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max's screen.

Apple has joined the AI game with Apple Intelligence, finally catching up to its competitors in that department. And with the iOS 18.1 update in October, most people who have a compatible iPhone can finally use those Apple Intelligence tools, including Clean Up.

The Clean Up tool in the Photos app is basically Apple’s version of Google’s Magic Eraser or Samsung’s Object Eraser. Back when I compared Magic Eraser and Object Eraser, Samsung’s tool was the better of the two. So, how does Apple’s Clean Up compare? Let’s find out.
The limitations of object removal tools

Read more
Gemini in Google Maps may be the best use of mobile AI yet
Google Maps on the Asus Zenfone 11 Ultra.

We scarcely need reminding that Google is putting AI into everything, but its latest push is probably one of the most interesting and immediately helpful yet, as Google Maps has now entered its Gemini era.
Vast experience
Before going into the many AI updates happening across all of Google’s “Geo” (the collective name for all its mapping tools) departments, it’s helpful to understand just how rich Google’s location data already is. Collected over the last 20 years, Google’s mapping expertise is available in more than 250 countries and territories across the world, and Google Maps alone has more than 2 billion active users each month.

Google already uses AI in its mapping products, such as the Lens overlay in Maps’ AR mode, which puts live place information in front of you on the map. Google is now using AI to improve the photo-realistic 3D tour in Immersive View, a feature first launched last year, with live data on the location, including weather, parking, and turn-by-turn information. Immersive View is now set to launch in 150 cities this week and will include university campuses, too.

Read more