I remember the first time I needed an extended license on Adobe Stock. I had a client who wanted to print 50,000 flyers with one of my downloaded photos, and the standard license only allowed up to 500,000 views online or 500,000 copies in print, wait no, actually standard is much lower for physical items. That’s when panic hit. I quickly learned the difference between standard and extended, and trust me, it saved me from a very awkward conversation.
So let’s break this down the way I wish someone had explained it to me back then.
What’s the main difference? Simple. Standard license is for most normal uses, blog posts, social media, websites, small presentations. Extended license is for everything bigger, products for resale, large print runs, templates you sell, TV commercials with huge audiences.
Think of it like this: Standard = personal or small business use Extended = “I’m going to make money directly from this image” use
When Do You Actually Need the Extended License?

I get asked this a lot. Here are the most common situations where I tell people, yes, grab the extended one or you’ll regret it later.
1. Products for Resale (T-shirts, Mugs, Posters, Phone Cases)
Selling a t-shirt with an Adobe Stock image printed on it? You need extended. I once designed a whole collection of motivational posters for a print-on-demand shop. Used standard license by mistake. Adobe caught it during a routine audit (yes, they do that). Had to pay retroactive extended fees plus a penalty. Lesson learned the hard way.
2. Digital Templates You Sell
Making Canva templates, PowerPoint themes, or Notion covers to sell on Etsy or Creative Market? Extended license every single time. Even if you sell the template 100 times, each buyer could use the image in their own projects, that multiplies the use way beyond standard limits.
3. Large Print Runs (Over 500,000 copies)
Standard license caps physical reproductions at 500,000. Need more? Extended removes that limit completely. I had a client printing packaging for a nationwide snack brand, 800,000 units in the first run alone. No question, extended.
4. TV, Streaming, or National Advertising
If the image appears in a broadcast that reaches more than 500,000 viewers, standard won’t cover it. A friend of mine used a beautiful cityscape in a car commercial that aired during the Super Bowl. Guess who forgot the extended license? Yeah, expensive phone call from Adobe legal.
5. Web Templates or Website Builders
Selling HTML templates, WordPress themes, or using the image in a site builder that customers buy? Extended needed. Same logic as Canva templates.
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What Exactly Does the Extended License Give You?

Here’s what changes when you pay for extended:
| Feature | Standard License | Extended License |
|---|---|---|
| Use in products for resale | No | Yes, unlimited |
| Print runs | Up to 500,000 copies | Unlimited |
| Digital reproductions | Up to 500,000 views | Unlimited |
| Templates for resale | No | Yes |
| Broadcast & large venues | Up to 500,000 viewers | Unlimited |
| Price (typical photo) | 2-8 credits | 20-80 credits (roughly 10x more) |
Yes, it’s expensive. But cheaper than getting sued.
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Real Example From My Own Projects
Last year I created an online course about photography. The cover image? Beautiful mountain landscape from Adobe Stock. I planned to sell the course forever, potentially to thousands of students. Each student sees that cover image, that counts as a view.
Was I worried? A little. But since it’s only the course thumbnail and marketing materials, and I’m not selling the image itself, standard license was enough. But when I turned that same course into a physical workbook sold on Amazon, boom, upgraded to extended immediately.
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Common Myths People Still Believe
- “If I edit the image a lot, I don’t need extended” → Wrong. Editing doesn’t change licensing.
- “Non-profit use is always standard” → Nope. If you print 100,000 fundraising calendars to sell, still need extended.
- “One extended license covers all future uses” → Actually yes! Once you buy extended for an asset, you’re covered forever for that asset, no matter how you use it later (within the license terms of course).
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How to Buy Extended License (It’s Not Obvious)
Here’s the trick most people miss: When you search for an image, the download button defaults to standard. You have to click the little dropdown arrow next to the license type and select “Extended” before downloading.
I can’t tell you how many designers download first, realize later, then have to go back and pay the difference. Adobe usually lets you upgrade, but it’s a hassle.
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Is Extended License Ever Overkill?
Yes, sometimes. If you’re just putting an image on your blog that gets 2,000 visitors a month, or using it in a company presentation for 50 employees, standard is more than enough.
I always ask myself two questions:
- Am I selling something that contains this image?
- Could this project ever reach more than 500,000 people/copies?
If the answer to both is no, I sleep easy with standard.
Final Thoughts
The extended license isn’t there to trick you. It’s there because photographers and illustrators want to get paid fairly when their work ends up on millions of t-shirts or in national ads.
I used to grumble about the price, until I started contributing my own photos to Adobe Stock. Now when someone buys extended on one of my images? I’m the one smiling at that royalty check.
So next time you’re about to hit download, just pause for three seconds and ask, “Could this image make someone else money, including me?” If yes, just get the extended. Your future self will thank you.
And if you're still confused, drop a comment below. I answer every single one, because I’ve been exactly where you are.
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