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Image AI

Adobe Firefly

Commercially safe generative AI built into Photoshop and Creative Cloud — trained on licensed content for business-ready use

Free plan available Commercial license Photoshop integration
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Overview

What is Adobe Firefly and what can it do?

Adobe Firefly was built from the ground up to solve a problem enterprise creative teams care about deeply: commercial safety. Where several competing image models were trained on broadly scraped internet data of uncertain provenance, Firefly was trained specifically on Adobe Stock, licensed content, and public domain material, giving businesses confidence that generated output carries lower legal risk for commercial use. Its most practical strength, though, is where it lives: Generative Fill and Generative Expand inside Photoshop let you extend a photo's canvas or remove and replace objects with a simple selection, directly within the editing workflow millions of designers already use daily, rather than as a separate generation step.

Generative Fill and Generative Expand directly inside Photoshop
Trained specifically on licensed and public domain content for commercial safety
Style and structure reference options for consistent, on-brand output
Deep integration across the full Adobe Creative Cloud suite
Firefly Video for generative assistance inside Premiere Pro
Support for third-party partner models within the same interface
Pricing

Firefly plans and pricing in 2026

Free
$0
A starting monthly allotment of generative credits
Creative Cloud
$22.99/mo
Firefly credits bundled inside a full Creative Cloud subscription
💡
Our take on pricing

The free tier is fine for occasional Generative Fill use but credits disappear quickly in active production work. The standalone Firefly plan at $9.99/month is a low-cost add-on if you don't already have Creative Cloud. If you already pay for Creative Cloud, the bundled credits mean Firefly essentially comes at no extra cost.

Evaluation

Adobe Firefly pros and cons

Pros
  • Lower legal risk for commercial use thanks to licensed-content training
  • Generative Fill in Photoshop is the most convenient photo editing workflow available
  • Deep integration across the entire Adobe Creative Cloud ecosystem
  • Style and structure references help maintain brand consistency
  • Firefly Video extends generative editing into Premiere Pro workflows
Cons
  • Pure text-to-image generation is less artistically striking than Midjourney or FLUX
  • Monthly credit allotments are consumed quickly during active production work
  • Best value requires an existing or new Creative Cloud subscription
  • Fewer fine-grained manual controls than dedicated generation platforms
Latest updates

Firefly news and recent changes

May 2026
Firefly Image 5 released

The latest model generation improved photorealism and added support for using third-party partner models directly inside the Firefly interface.

Mar 2026
Firefly Video expands in Premiere

Generative capabilities in Premiere Pro extended to help fill gaps between clips and assist with transition generation.

Verdict

Is Adobe Firefly worth it in 2026?

Adobe Firefly is not trying to win a pure aesthetic contest against Midjourney or FLUX — it is solving a different, very real problem for business users: generating and editing images with a training provenance that reduces commercial legal risk. For anyone already working in Photoshop, Generative Fill alone can be a genuine daily time-saver that no standalone generation tool replicates as conveniently. If your priority is commercial safety and workflow integration inside Adobe's ecosystem, Firefly is the practical choice; if pure generation quality is the only criterion, FLUX or Midjourney will generally win a side-by-side comparison.

Quick facts
Adobe Firefly
Category Image AI
Founded 2023
Free trial Yes
Starting price $0
Commercial use All plans
Public API Yes
Platforms Web, Photoshop, Creative Cloud

Adobe Firefly Review 2026: The Complete Guide to Commercially Safe Generative AI

Adobe Firefly enters the image generation conversation from a different angle than most competitors: rather than chasing the most striking aesthetic, it was built to answer a question enterprise legal and creative teams ask before anything else — can we actually use this commercially without risk? This review looks at how Firefly answers that question and where its Photoshop integration earns its keep.

Training data provenance as a product feature

Firefly was trained specifically on Adobe Stock imagery, other licensed content, and public domain material, rather than broadly scraped web data of uncertain origin. Adobe backs this with IP indemnification on eligible plans, meaning the company offers legal protection for businesses using Firefly-generated content commercially. For enterprise creative teams operating under legal review, this provenance and indemnification can matter more than raw output quality.

Generative Fill: the practical daily workflow win

Firefly's most immediately useful feature for working designers is Generative Fill inside Photoshop. Select any area of an existing photo, describe what should appear there or simply delete the selection, and Firefly generates content that blends naturally with the surrounding image — all without leaving the normal Photoshop editing session. Generative Expand does the same for extending a canvas beyond its original borders, useful for reframing a photo to a different aspect ratio without cropping out important content.

This matters because it eliminates a common friction point with standalone generation tools: the need to generate an image elsewhere, then import and manually blend it into an existing composition. Firefly folds generation directly into the editing tool millions of designers already use.

Who should use Adobe Firefly?

Enterprise and agency creative teams operating under legal or brand-safety review get real, practical value from Firefly's licensed training data and indemnification.

Existing Photoshop users gain an editing superpower through Generative Fill and Expand that saves substantial manual retouching time on everyday tasks.

Pure text-to-image creators chasing the most artistically striking output in isolation will often get better raw generation results from Midjourney or FLUX.

Firefly vs. Midjourney and FLUX

In head-to-head text-to-image comparisons, Midjourney and FLUX generally win on pure visual polish and photorealism. Firefly's case rests on a different value proposition entirely: reduced commercial legal risk, IP indemnification, and the unmatched convenience of Generative Fill and Expand inside an existing Photoshop workflow. For businesses weighing legal exposure alongside creative output, that trade-off is often the right one.

Conclusion

Adobe Firefly in 2026 succeeds at the specific job it was designed for: giving business and creative teams a commercially safer way to generate and edit images without leaving the Adobe tools they already rely on. It won't always win a pure aesthetic contest against Midjourney or FLUX, but for teams that need both generation and precise photo editing in one legally-defensible package, Firefly remains a strong, practical choice.