Upload a photo to automatically blur the faces in it
Accepted formats: JPG, PNG, WEBP, BMP, GIF (non-animated)
Paste (Ctrl/⌘+V) or drop an image — or import from a URL
Face Blur automatically finds every face in a photo and hides it — blur, pixelate, or a solid black box — so you can share pictures without exposing identities. Image Machine runs a lightweight face-detection model directly in your browser, so your photo is never uploaded and nothing is stored on a server. Pick a redaction style, adjust the strength, and download a clean image in one click — ideal for protests, classrooms, real-estate and street photography, social posts, or any GDPR-conscious workflow.
How It Works
Choose a tool
Pick from 120+ tools to resize, convert, compress, or enhance your image.
Upload & edit
Drag and drop your image and adjust the settings. It stays on your device.
Download
Save your result instantly — no watermark, no sign-up required.
Why Image Machine?
Your files never leave your device
All processing runs locally in your browser. Your images are never uploaded to a server.
Completely free
Every tool is free, with no limits, no watermarks, and no hidden costs.
Lightning fast
No upload waiting — your images are processed instantly on your own device.
Professional quality
Pixel-perfect output with full control over format, size, and quality.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are my photos uploaded to a server?
No. Both the face detection and the blurring happen entirely in your browser using an on-device model — your image never leaves your computer or phone, which makes it safe for sensitive photos.
Which redaction style should I use?
Blur looks natural and is usually enough for casual sharing. Pixelate gives a stronger, obviously-censored mosaic look. A black box fully removes the face for maximum privacy. You can switch between them and tune the strength until you are happy, then download.
Why didn't it detect a face?
The detector works best on reasonably clear, roughly front-facing faces. Very small, blurry, heavily turned, or partially hidden faces may be missed. Try a higher-resolution image, and enable “Show detected faces” to see exactly what was found.