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How to Remove the PhotoRoom Watermark From Your Product Photos

PhotoRoom's free tier stamps a branded badge on every export. Here's how AI removal tools handle it, when cleaning it makes sense, and when subscribing is the smarter call.

DeWatermark TeamTips, tutorials, and tool comparisons from the DeWatermark editorial team.

How to Remove the PhotoRoom Watermark From Your Product Photos

PhotoRoom has become one of the most-used AI photo tools among ecommerce sellers. It strips backgrounds cleanly, generates studio-quality product shots from phone photos, and saves hours of editing time. For small sellers, it is often the first editing tool that actually works.

The catch: the free plan exports images with a PhotoRoom badge stamped into them. That is fine for previewing your work, but not for listing pages on Amazon, Etsy, or your own Shopify store. A branded watermark from your editing software has no place in a product listing.

Here is what the watermark looks like, when AI removal tools can help with it, and how to handle it properly.

What the PhotoRoom Watermark Looks Like

The PhotoRoom free export badge is typically a small logo lockup placed in the bottom corner of the image. It reads "Created with PhotoRoom" or shows the PhotoRoom logo mark. It is compact and translucent compared to the full-frame overlays you see on stock photo sites, which makes it easier to target for removal.

The badge color adapts slightly to the background, and it sits on top of the image layer rather than being baked into the original subject. On white backgrounds, which are common for product photos, the watermark stands out. On lifestyle backgrounds with varied color, it can be more or less visible depending on placement.

Because the badge covers a relatively small and consistent area, AI inpainting tools handle it well. There is plenty of surrounding context for the algorithm to reconstruct.

Why PhotoRoom Adds It

PhotoRoom's business model is a subscription. Free accounts get access to the core removal tools but with limits on export quality and volume, and with a branding badge on downloads. Paid tiers remove the badge and unlock higher resolution, batch processing, and template access.

This is standard practice for AI photo tools. The watermark is not punitive; it is how the free tier earns its way without cutting off access entirely. You get a functional tool; they get attribution.

If you plan to use PhotoRoom regularly for your store, the Pro plan is worth evaluating. The per-month cost is far less than what you would spend on product photography sessions, and the export quality is noticeably higher than free-tier outputs.

When AI Removal Makes Sense

The legitimate reasons to remove a PhotoRoom watermark with a tool like dewatermark.com are narrower than you might expect.

You are evaluating the service before subscribing. You have used the free tier to test your workflow, you like the results, but you want to see what a clean export looks like placed in a real mockup. Running a few test images through a removal tool to evaluate quality before committing to a subscription is a reasonable use case.

You have old exports from before you upgraded. You built a product catalog on the free tier, then later subscribed. You would rather clean the old images than re-export everything, especially if some were from product batches you no longer have available. The photos are yours, the edits are yours; you just need to remove the legacy badge.

Internal mockups and client presentations. You are showing a client how their product would look on a landing page. A watermarked editor logo in the mockup distracts from the concept. Cleaning it for the presentation is sensible; the final assets would come from a paid export anyway.

The original file is unavailable. You exported on free tier, the original session is no longer in your account, and you need the image cleaned for use on a site you own. This falls into the same category as having your own photos.

The one case that does not apply: pulling a clean version of a PhotoRoom export to skip paying for the subscription you would otherwise need. That is not what removal tools are for, and it falls outside the intended use of either product.

How AI Watermark Removal Handles the PhotoRoom Badge

Tools like dewatermark.com use AI inpainting: the algorithm analyzes the pixels surrounding the watermark and reconstructs what should be underneath it. For a small, corner-positioned badge on a product photo, this works well.

Product images with white or solid backgrounds are the easiest case. The AI has a large area of consistent surrounding context to draw from. It fills the badge area with a clean continuation of the background, and the result is typically indistinguishable from a clean export.

Lifestyle images with complex, varied backgrounds near the badge position are harder. If there is an important detail, a face, or a complex texture directly under the badge, the inpainting will blend or estimate rather than reconstruct exactly. The output can look fine at a glance and still show softness or minor artifacts on close inspection.

For most product photography on white or simple backgrounds, the AI result is clean. For more complex images, expect to review the output at full size before using it.

Product display on white background used for ecommerce listing

Step-by-Step: Removing the Badge

  1. Export your image from PhotoRoom as usual, even with the watermark badge present.
  2. Open dewatermark.com in your browser. No account is required.
  3. Upload the image.
  4. The tool will detect the watermark region automatically. You can also brush over it manually if it misses the badge.
  5. Run the removal. For a small corner badge on a clean background, processing takes a few seconds.
  6. Download the result and compare it against the original at 100% zoom before using it.

The whole workflow takes under a minute per image. For small batches, the manual process is fast enough. If you need to clean dozens of images at once, check whether dewatermark.com's batch mode covers your volume.

Quality Expectations by Background Type

AI removal tools reconstruct based on surrounding context. The quality of the output depends almost entirely on what is under the watermark.

White background product shots: consistently clean. The badge sits on a flat, uniform surface, and the inpainting has a straightforward job. This is the best-case scenario for PhotoRoom images specifically.

Gradient or textured backgrounds: usually good. Slightly more processing complexity, but still within the range AI handles well.

Lifestyle shots with the badge near an important detail: variable. The reconstruction may be slightly soft or show a small blended patch. At web display sizes this often does not matter; in high-resolution print it can.

If you are not satisfied with the automatic result, most tools let you manually refine the selection or adjust the inpainting radius. A slightly larger selection around the badge often improves the result on complex backgrounds.

The Subscription Math

PhotoRoom offers multiple paid tiers for different seller volumes. For sellers who process more than a handful of product images a month, the subscription cost is minor compared to the time savings. The math is particularly favorable if you are replacing in-person product photography sessions.

The free tier is best treated as a trial. It gives you a real sense of whether the tool fits your workflow. If it does, subscribing removes the badge, raises export limits, and unlocks better resolution options. If the tool does not fit your needs, there are alternatives worth testing.

For pure background removal without a subscription requirement, tools like remove.bg and Canva's background remover are worth comparing. Neither is as feature-rich as PhotoRoom's full suite, but both offer free exports without branding on smaller images.

Ecommerce products arranged for photography against neutral background

Using Removal Tools Responsibly

Every approach covered here applies only to images you created, own, or have clear permission to edit. Running a removal tool on a product photo you took with your camera, edited in PhotoRoom, and exported yourself is entirely within scope. You own the image.

Using the same tools to strip watermarks from stock photos, licensed content you do not own, or images created by someone else without permission is a different matter. That is not what these tools are designed for.

If you are unsure whether you have the right to edit a given image, check the license it came with before processing it.

The Bottom Line

The PhotoRoom badge is a small, well-positioned corner watermark that AI removal tools handle cleanly on most product photos. For ecommerce sellers who need to evaluate outputs before subscribing, clean up old free-tier exports, or prepare internal mockups, dewatermark.com provides a fast, browser-based workflow with no account required.

For ongoing production use with PhotoRoom, the subscription is the right answer. Watermark-free exports and higher resolution limits pay for themselves quickly for anyone listing products regularly.

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