Shutterstock

One of the largest stock media marketplaces in the world, with photos, illustrations, vectors, video, music, 3D assets, and AI-generated images under a unified licence.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Shutterstock For?
  2. Library & Search
  3. Licensing & Legal
  4. AI Image Generator
  5. Integrations & Workflow
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Shutterstock For?

Shutterstock is one of the two dominant mainstream stock media marketplaces, alongside Adobe Stock. It has hundreds of millions of photos, illustrations, vectors, video clips, music tracks, and 3D assets available under a unified commercial licence. For agencies, marketers, publishers, and businesses that need stock content at scale, it's one of the default options.

It's a particularly strong fit for teams with steady, ongoing stock needs. The subscription plans are built around recurring use — a set number of images per month at a sharply lower per-image rate than on-demand pricing. If your team needs 20+ images a month across a website, blog, ads, and social, a subscription usually pays for itself.

It also suits content categories beyond photos. Shutterstock's video, music, sound effects, editorial, and 3D model libraries are comparable to or larger than most dedicated competitors. Having one account for multiple media types simplifies licensing paperwork and vendor management.

Shutterstock is less compelling for one-off users who need a single image. Per-image pricing on small packs is relatively high compared with buying from smaller libraries, and free alternatives like Unsplash and Pexels cover casual needs at zero cost. For occasional users, a free site plus the occasional premium purchase elsewhere often works better.

It's also less attractive for users who want the Adobe ecosystem. Adobe Stock integrates directly into Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Premiere Pro with previews, licensing, and asset sync. Shutterstock has plugins but the integration isn't as deep for Adobe-centric workflows.

Library & Search

Shutterstock's main appeal is scale. The library is measured in hundreds of millions of assets across several media types, and new content is added continuously by a global contributor base.

In practice, Shutterstock's search is solid but not magical. Results skew towards highly generic commercial imagery — smiling people in offices, hands typing on laptops, colourful backgrounds — which is useful for most business content but can feel samey. For more distinctive or editorial imagery, you sometimes need to refine with narrower keywords or dig past the first few pages.

Licensing & Legal

Stock licensing is where the real value of a paid site versus a free one becomes clear. Shutterstock's licence is designed to be usable by businesses with minimal legal friction.

The indemnification clause is one of the reasons large brands pay for stock rather than using free alternatives. Free sites like Unsplash and Pexels have permissive licences but no legal backing — if a model or property owner later disputes a photo, the user is on their own. Paid sites shift that risk to the marketplace.

AI Image Generator

Shutterstock has integrated a text-to-image AI generator directly into the platform. It's positioned as a commercially safe alternative to generating images from uncertain sources.

The quality is good but not best-in-class. Compared with tools like Midjourney or Adobe Firefly, Shutterstock's generator produces cleaner commercial-style images but less exotic or artistic output. Its main selling point is the commercial licence and indemnification — for brands that need to justify the provenance of their visuals, that matters more than raw creative quality.

Integrations & Workflow

Stock sites are only useful if they fit your workflow, and Shutterstock has built a broad integration surface over the years.

For Adobe-centric teams, the native integrations make Shutterstock usable without leaving the design tool. For teams on Figma, Canva, or custom stacks, the plugin ecosystem generally covers the most common workflows.

Pricing & Plans

PlanImage Pack (on-demand)Small SubscriptionMedium SubscriptionLarge Subscription
Price (monthly)~$49 (5 images, one-off)~$29/mo~$199/mo~$249/mo
Images per month5 (no expiry short-term)10350750
Per-image cost~$9.80~$2.90~$0.57~$0.33
LicenceStandardStandardStandardStandard
Rollover of unusedN/ALimitedLimitedLimited
Video / musicSold separatelySold separatelySold separatelySold separately

The on-demand image packs are the most expensive per image but useful if you only need a handful of assets and don't want to commit to a recurring subscription. They're also useful for one-off high-value purchases when you need a specific image.

The subscription plans are where Shutterstock's per-image cost becomes competitive. At the largest tiers, per-image cost drops below a dollar, which is difficult to beat for teams with steady volume. Unused downloads typically roll over for a limited period, so missing a month isn't catastrophic.

Video, music, and editorial have their own plans and pricing. Video clips in particular can be expensive individually, and dedicated video subscriptions are worth considering for teams producing regular video content.

Enterprise plans offer multi-user access, centralised billing, expanded legal coverage, and API access. Pricing is custom and aimed at agencies and in-house creative teams at larger companies.

Shutterstock's pricing has gradually increased over the years, and the biggest change has been the shift away from cheap on-demand bundles towards recurring subscriptions. For users who can commit to a subscription the per-image economics are strong. For one-off needs, it's often worth comparing with Adobe Stock, iStock, Depositphotos, and 123RF to find the best price for your specific project.

Shutterstock

Large-scale stock media marketplace with photos, video, music, 3D, and AI generation under a unified commercial licence.

Open Shutterstock →