Adjust Image Exposure
Fix underexposed or overexposed photos by adjusting exposure levels.
Adjust Image Exposure
Edit your image directly in the browser
Click here or drag & drop your image
Supports: JPG, PNG, WebP
☀️ Why Use Our Exposure Adjuster?
Took a photo in low light and it came out too dark? Our exposure tool brightens underexposed images by lifting shadow detail, revealing faces, textures, and colors that were hidden in the darkness without washing out highlights.
Exposure corrections are calculated locally inside your browser. Your personal and professional photos are processed on-device with zero server interaction, ensuring complete privacy for sensitive or confidential images.
See the exposure change instantly as you move the slider. The live preview lets you find the perfect brightness level before downloading — no guesswork, no repeated trial-and-error adjustments required.
⚙️ How to Fix Image Exposure
Add your underexposed or overexposed image. Works with JPG, PNG, and WebP photos from phone cameras, DSLRs, or webcams.
Drag the exposure slider right to brighten or left to darken. The preview updates in real-time, showing you exactly how the corrected image will look before you save.
Save your properly exposed image. The correction is applied permanently to the downloaded file, ensuring it displays correctly on all devices and platforms.
Save Indoor & Night Photos
Indoor lighting and nighttime conditions frequently produce dark, muddy photos where faces and details are barely visible. Our exposure tool lifts the shadows to reveal hidden detail, making birthday party shots, restaurant photos, and concert pictures usable and shareable — rescuing moments that might otherwise be lost to poor lighting.
Fix Backlit Subject Silhouettes
Photos taken against bright windows, sunsets, or overhead lighting often turn subjects into dark silhouettes. Increasing exposure brings the subject's face and clothing back into view while keeping the bright background from becoming completely blown out — a common correction for outdoor portraits and real estate interior shots.
Prepare Photos for Printing
Printed photos tend to appear darker than they look on screen due to differences between screen backlighting and paper reflectivity. Slightly increasing exposure before printing compensates for this shift, ensuring your prints look bright and vibrant rather than dark and muddy when viewed under normal room lighting.