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Best Free Stock Photo Sites in 2026

Updated February 27, 2026 · 15 min read

Stock photos power the internet. Every blog post, landing page, social media campaign, and marketing email needs images, and paying $10-50 per photo adds up fast. Fortunately, several sites offer millions of high-quality, free-to-use photos with generous licenses that cover commercial use.

This guide compares the six best free stock photo sites in 2026: Unsplash, Pexels, Pixabay, Burst by Shopify, StockSnap, and Kaboompics. We cover library size, photo quality, license terms, search experience, and the specific use cases where each site excels.

Table of Contents 1. Unsplash 2. Pexels 3. Pixabay 4. Burst by Shopify 5. StockSnap 6. Kaboompics 7. Full Comparison Table 8. Understanding Stock Photo Licenses 9. Quality Comparison: What to Expect 10. Tips for Finding Better Stock Photos 11. What to Avoid with Free Stock Photos 12. FAQ

1. Unsplash

Unsplash is the most popular free stock photo site in the world, and for good reason. It hosts over 3.5 million high-resolution photos contributed by a global community of over 300,000 photographers. The quality floor is remarkably high because Unsplash curates submissions and features the best work prominently.

Best for: Blog posts, website hero images, social media, presentations, and any project that needs consistently beautiful, editorial-style photography.

Unsplash License details

The Unsplash License is more permissive than Creative Commons Zero (CC0) in some ways but has specific restrictions. You can use photos for free for commercial and non-commercial purposes. You do not need to credit the photographer (though it is encouraged). However, you cannot sell unmodified Unsplash photos as prints, posters, or physical goods. You also cannot compile Unsplash photos to create a competing stock photo service.

Strengths

Weaknesses

2. Pexels

Pexels is Unsplash's closest competitor, with over 3.2 million free photos and a growing video library. Pexels was acquired by Canva in 2019, and the integration shows: you can insert Pexels photos directly into Canva designs. Pexels also includes free stock videos, which Unsplash does not.

Best for: Projects that need both photos and videos from one source. Social media managers, content creators, and Canva users.

Pexels License details

The Pexels License mirrors Unsplash's terms. Free for all purposes, no attribution needed, but you cannot sell unmodified photos or create a competing service. One advantage: Pexels explicitly allows using photos in products for sale (like a photo on a t-shirt or mug) as long as the photo is a component of the design, not the sole product.

Strengths

Weaknesses

3. Pixabay

Pixabay is the Swiss Army knife of free stock content. It offers over 3.9 million photos, illustrations, vectors, videos, music, and sound effects. If you need multiple content types from one source, Pixabay is unmatched.

Best for: Projects that need illustrations, vectors, and music in addition to photos. Content creators who want everything from one platform.

Pixabay Content License details

Pixabay's license changed in 2019 from CC0 to a custom license. Content is free for commercial and personal use without attribution. Restrictions: you cannot sell unmodified content, redistribute on competing platforms, or use identifiable people in a way that implies endorsement without consent. The terms are similar to Unsplash and Pexels.

Strengths

Weaknesses

4. Burst by Shopify

Burst is Shopify's free stock photo platform, specifically designed for entrepreneurs and eCommerce businesses. The photo selection focuses on business, technology, lifestyle, and product-oriented imagery that works well on online stores and marketing materials.

Best for: Shopify store owners, eCommerce businesses, entrepreneurs, and anyone building a commercial website.

Strengths

Weaknesses

5. StockSnap

StockSnap offers hundreds of free high-resolution photos added weekly. It is owned by the same company behind Snappa (a graphic design tool), and the photos are curated for quality. The library is smaller but consistently good.

Best for: Bloggers and marketers who want curated quality without wading through millions of results. Quick downloads with no signup.

Strengths

Weaknesses

6. Kaboompics

Kaboompics is a niche free stock photo site run by photographer Karolina Grabowska. The library specializes in styled lifestyle, fashion, interior design, and flat-lay photography with a cohesive aesthetic. Every photo comes with a complementary color palette, which is unique among stock photo sites.

Best for: Bloggers, Instagram creators, and brands that need aesthetically consistent, styled photography. Interior design, fashion, beauty, and lifestyle content.

Kaboompics License details

Free for personal and commercial use. No attribution required. The main restriction: you cannot redistribute the photos on other stock photo sites or sell them unmodified. You can use them in designs, websites, social media, print materials, and products for sale.

Strengths

Weaknesses

7. Full Comparison Table

SiteLibrary SizeLicenseAttributionVideoVectorsBest For
Unsplash3.5M+Unsplash LicenseNot requiredNoNoEditorial photography
Pexels3.2M+Pexels LicenseNot requiredYes (50K+)NoPhotos + videos
Pixabay3.9M+Pixabay LicenseNot requiredYesYesAll content types
Burst20K+CC0 / ShopifyNot requiredNoNoeCommerce
StockSnap100K+CC0Not requiredNoNoCurated quality
Kaboompics25K+Kaboompics LicenseNot requiredNoNoStyled lifestyle

8. Understanding Stock Photo Licenses

Not all "free" photos are equal. Understanding licenses prevents legal problems down the road.

Creative Commons Zero (CC0)

The most permissive license. The photographer has waived all rights. You can use, modify, and distribute the photo for any purpose, including commercial, without attribution. No restrictions whatsoever. StockSnap and some Burst photos use CC0.

Custom Free Licenses (Unsplash, Pexels, Pixabay)

These are nearly as permissive as CC0 but include specific restrictions. The common restrictions are: no reselling unmodified photos, no using photos to create a competing stock service, and no using identifiable people in misleading or offensive contexts. For 99% of use cases, these licenses are functionally identical to CC0.

Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY)

Some stock sites use CC BY, which requires you to credit the photographer when you use their work. The credit must include the photographer's name, the license type, and a link to the original. This is still free but requires attribution work.

Editorial Use Only

Some photos (especially on larger sites like Getty and Shutterstock) are marked "editorial use only." These photos contain recognizable trademarks, logos, or people who have not signed model releases. You can use them in news, commentary, and educational content but not in advertising, marketing, or product packaging. None of the six sites in this guide use "editorial only" restrictions.

9. Quality Comparison: What to Expect

Not all free stock photos are created equal. Here is an honest assessment of what you will find on each platform.

Resolution and technical quality

All six sites offer high-resolution downloads. Unsplash and Pexels typically provide photos at 4000-6000 px on the long edge, which is more than enough for web use, social media, and most print applications. Pixabay offers multiple download sizes. Burst and Kaboompics also provide high-resolution originals.

Aesthetic quality

This is where the sites diverge. Unsplash has the highest average aesthetic quality because it actively curates submissions. Pexels is close behind. Kaboompics has consistent quality within its niche. Pixabay has the widest range: you will find both stunning photos and mediocre snapshots. StockSnap and Burst maintain good quality through smaller, curated libraries.

Diversity and inclusion

Pexels leads in diversity of people photography, with dedicated collections featuring people of different ethnicities, body types, ages, and abilities. Unsplash has improved significantly but still skews toward certain demographics. Pixabay and Burst are improving. If diverse representation matters for your project, start with Pexels.

10. Tips for Finding Better Stock Photos

11. What to Avoid with Free Stock Photos

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FAQ

Can I use free stock photos for commercial purposes?

Yes. All six sites in this guide (Unsplash, Pexels, Pixabay, Burst, StockSnap, and Kaboompics) allow free commercial use. You can use their photos on your business website, in marketing materials, on product packaging, and in social media ads. The main restrictions are: you cannot resell unmodified photos and you cannot create a competing stock photo service.

Do I need to credit the photographer?

No, none of the six sites in this guide require attribution for using their photos. However, all of them encourage you to credit the photographer when possible. It is good practice and supports the photographers who make free content available.

Are free stock photos as good as paid ones?

In many cases, yes. Unsplash and Pexels photos are regularly used by major publications and brands. The main advantages of paid stock (Getty, Shutterstock, Adobe Stock) are: larger libraries, more niche content, guaranteed model releases for every person in every photo, and exclusive photos that fewer competitors will use. For most projects, free stock is more than sufficient.

Can I edit free stock photos?

Yes. All six sites allow you to modify, crop, filter, composite, and otherwise edit their photos. You can combine them with other elements, add text, apply color grades, and use them as backgrounds. The only thing you cannot do is resell the photo itself without significant modification.

What is the difference between Unsplash and Pexels?

Both are excellent. Unsplash has slightly higher average photo quality and a more editorial feel. Pexels includes free videos in addition to photos, has better diversity in people photography, and integrates directly with Canva. If you only use one, Unsplash has the edge for photo quality; Pexels wins if you also need video.

How do I avoid using overused stock photos?

Skip the first page of results, which shows the most downloaded images. Use specific search terms with multiple descriptors. Filter by recent uploads to find newer content. Browse photographer profiles for themed sets that fewer people have discovered. And always edit photos (crop, color grade, overlay) to make them feel unique to your brand.

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