I’ve been shooting photos seriously for about eight years now, mostly travel, lifestyle, and the occasional portrait gig. Like most of you, I kept hearing about Adobe Stock and wondering if it made sense to actually put my work there. So last year I finally took the leap, uploaded a bunch of images, and let it run. Here’s my honest take after a full year of being a contributor.
Adobe Stock is basically a marketplace inside the Adobe ecosystem. When someone searches for “sunset beach” in Photoshop or Illustrator, my photos can pop up right there. Buyers pay Adobe, Adobe takes a cut, and I get the rest.
You upload through the contributor portal, add titles, keywords, and descriptions, then wait for review. Once approved, the images go live across Lightroom, Photoshop, Premiere, and their website.
Quick numbers from my own dashboard right now:
- I have 312 images live
- Earned roughly $2,400 this year
- Highest single download paid $9.80, lowest was $0.33
Not life-changing, but it pays for a couple of lenses every year without me doing anything extra.
The Money: Can You Actually Make Decent Cash?

Let’s talk dollars because that’s what everyone wants to know first.
Is the payout good? Compared to the old microstock days, no. Back in 2010 I was getting $0.25–$3 per download on the big sites. Adobe starts at 33% royalty for photos (I get 35% now as I crossed some threshold). A standard license download usually gives me between $1.20 and $4 after their cut.
Is it worth it anyway? Yes, for three reasons.
First, volume. Adobe pushes their own library hard inside Creative Cloud apps. My images get way more views than on any independent site I’ve tried.
Second, extended licenses. When someone buys the big license for merchandise or huge print runs, I’ve seen $80–$200 hits. I got $187 last month from one extended license, best feeling ever.
Third, it’s almost 100% passive. I uploaded most of my portfolio once, spent a weekend keywording properly, and now money trickles in while I sleep.
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Quality Control: Do They Reject a Lot?

Short answer: yes, at first.
My very first batch had a 40% rejection rate. Noise, chromatic aberration, dusty sensor spots, Adobe’s AI is brutal. After I cleaned up my editing workflow, my acceptance rate jumped to 95%.
Common reasons I still get rejections:
- Trademark stuff in the background (a Coke can I didn’t notice)
- Too much noise above ISO 6400
- Over-sharpening halos
- Model releases missing when there’s even a blurry person in the frame
Once you learn their rules, it’s fine. I now shoot with Adobe Stock in mind sometimes, cleaner compositions, no logos, proper releases.
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How Adobe Stock Compares to Shutterstock, Getty, and the Rest

I still upload to other platforms, so here’s a quick table from my own earnings this year (same portfolio size roughly):
| Platform | Images Live | Total Earnings 2024 | Avg per Download | Rejection Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adobe Stock | 312 | $2,400 | $2.40 | 5% now |
| Shutterstock | 1,200 | $1,850 | $0.68 | 2% |
| Getty/iStock | 180 | $980 | $4.10 | 25% |
| Alamy | 450 | $620 | $18 (when it sells) | Almost none |
Adobe sits in a sweet spot for me: decent volume, okay pay per download, not insane rejections.
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The Real Advantages Almost No One Talks About
Speed of sale My photos start selling on Adobe literally days after approval. On some agencies I wait months for the first download.
Integration with Lightroom I can upload straight from Lightroom collections. Drag, drop, add keywords, done. Saves hours.
Discoverability inside Creative Cloud Designers already paying $52.99/month for Adobe apps see my work first. That’s a captive audience.
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The Downsides You Should Know Before Jumping In
You don’t own the images anymore in a practical sense. Adobe can use them in their marketing, AI training (opt-out available now), and you can’t make them exclusive elsewhere if you want the best royalty rate.
Payout threshold is $25, and they pay only via PayPal or Payoneer. Fine for me, annoying for some.
Keyword spam doesn’t work. Their search algorithm punishes bad keywords fast. You have to be accurate or your stuff disappears.
Also Read This: Is Adobe Stock a Part of the Creative Cloud Package?
My Personal Strategy That Works Right Now
Here’s exactly what I do:
- Shoot commercial-first when traveling, clean backgrounds, space for text, happy diverse people when possible.
- Edit in Lightroom with Adobe Stock presets I made (slightly punchier colors, sharp but not crispy).
- Use 40–50 solid keywords per image, never stuff.
- Title formula: [Main subject] + [emotion/mood] + [location if relevant] – example: “Smiling young Asian woman drinking coffee in modern cafe”.
- Upload in batches of 50, once a month.
- Submit similar images to Shutterstock the same week (non-exclusive).
Result? Both platforms feed each other. Adobe gets sales from designers, Shutterstock from everyone else.
Is Adobe Stock Worth It in 2025?
For me, absolutely yes.
If you already shoot high-quality, commercial-style photos and don’t mind spending a few weekends keywording properly, it’s free money.
If you only do fine art, moody black-and-white, or super niche work, probably not. Buyers on Adobe want clean, bright, usable stuff.
If you hate keywording and metadata, run away. This isn’t passive if you do it wrong.
I treat it like a savings account that grows when I travel and shoot anyway. Some months $80, some months $400, averages out nicely.
Would I quit my client work for Adobe Stock alone? Hell no. But am I glad I finally started contributing? 100%.
If you’re sitting on a hard drive full of decent photos, just upload 50 and see what happens. Worst case, you make coffee money. Best case, it pays for that new 85mm you’ve been eyeing.
That’s been my experience anyway. Your mileage may vary, but for me, Adobe Stock quietly became one of my favorite income streams.
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