AI finds every face in your photo and pixelates, blurs, or blacks it out. Toggle faces on and off, cover anything the AI missed, and batch whole folders — all without the photo leaving your device.
Drop a photo here (or several)
or
JPG, PNG, WebP · multiple files become a batch · the face detector (~1.5 MB) downloads once, then runs on your device
Some photos need faces hidden before they go anywhere: kids in a class photo you want to share, strangers in the background of a listing, protest crowds, patients, students, or simply people who did not agree to be posted. This tool finds every face automatically, lets you decide which ones to hide, and applies pixelation, blur, or a black box — then hands back the anonymized copy.
The part that makes it trustworthy is the architecture: the face detection model (about 1.5 MB) downloads to your browser and runs on your device. A face blur tool that uploads your original photo to a server has already leaked the thing you were trying to protect. This one cannot, because nothing is transmitted at all.
For everything the pixels don't show but the file still knows (GPS location, capture time, device), run the result through the EXIF Metadata Scrubber workflow, or start there for photos you are not editing.
Drop your photo in and an AI face detector marks every face it finds. Click any face to include or exclude it, pick pixelate, blur, or black box, and download the result. It is free, has no watermark, and the photo never leaves your device.
Only if the tool never receives the photo. Here the face detection model (about 1.5 MB) downloads to your browser and runs on your device, so the photo you are anonymizing is never uploaded anywhere. Blurring faces for privacy and then uploading the original to a stranger's server would defeat the purpose.
Black box removes the pixels entirely and is unrecoverable. Heavy pixelation is effectively unrecoverable too. A light gaussian blur can sometimes be partially reversed by deblurring techniques, so if real anonymity matters, use pixelate at a strong setting or the black box. The tool defaults to pixelate for exactly this reason.
Click any detected box to toggle it off, or click its small x handle to remove a wrong detection entirely. Use Add region to drag a box over anything the detector missed: a partially turned face, a reflection, a license plate, a name tag. Undo (or Ctrl+Z) reverses your last change, and the sensitivity slider re-filters detections instantly.
Yes. Drop multiple photos and the tool detects and anonymizes every face in each one using your current style settings, then packages the results into a ZIP. Everything still happens on your device, one photo at a time.