All-in-one AI image platform with 48+ models, AI editor, ControlNet and API
Review by EuropeanStack EditorialUpdated Verified
getimg.ai punches far above the weight of a sub-ten-person bootstrapped team. Folding generation, editing, ControlNet and an API into one euro-priced workspace is a genuinely useful consolidation, and the free tier is generous enough to prove the point before you pay. The compromises are real: infrastructure sits on US clouds so EU hosting is not guaranteed, DreamBooth's removal cost power users some control, and support is only email. For a European creator or developer who wants breadth in one place and can live with those limits, it is one of the strongest Midjourney and Leonardo alternatives built on the continent.
getimg.ai is a Polish AI image generation platform that bundles text-to-image across 48+ models, an AI photo editor, ControlNet guidance and custom AI Characters into one browser workspace with a developer API. Built by Warsaw-based Webrockets and bootstrapped since 2022, it targets creators and teams who want a single tool instead of stitching together Midjourney, an editor and a training pipeline.
Headquarters
Warsaw, Poland
Founded
2022
Pricing
EU Data Hosting
No
Employees
1-10
Free
โฌ10/mo
โฌ30/mo
โฌ65/mo
โฌ175/mo
Pay-as-you-go
Billing: monthly, annual, pay-as-you-go
Midjourney gives you one model; DALL-E lives inside ChatGPT. getimg.ai puts 48+ models, an editor, ControlNet and a developer API into a single browser tab. That breadth is the pitch: instead of paying for a generator, a separate editor and a training service, you run the whole pipeline in one tab.
The company behind it is Webrockets Sp. z o.o., registered at Okopowa 47a in Warsaw, Poland. Brothers Jakub and Maciej ลukowski founded it in 2022 and have kept it bootstrapped, with no venture funding on record. The team is tiny, under ten people, which is startling given the surface area of the product. That lean structure shapes everything that follows, from the fast model roster updates to the thin human support.
The target user is a creator or small team that has outgrown a single generator. Someone producing marketing visuals who also needs to remove a background, upscale to print resolution, and occasionally hit an API from their own app. getimg.ai bets that keeping those jobs together beats hopping between Leonardo, an upscaler and a Photoshop plugin. For that specific person, the argument lands. A hobbyist who just wants pretty pictures will find it more machinery than the job requires.
The headline feature is choice. getimg.ai lists more than 48 image and video models in one place, including FLUX, Seedream, Qwen Image, GPT Image and Nano Banana. Each has a different temperament, and the roster turns over quickly as new releases land. This is the opposite of the Midjourney philosophy, where a single opinionated model defines the output. Here you audition models against the same prompt and keep the one that fits the brief. The trade-off is that you have to know, or learn, which model suits which task.
Generation and editing share one surface. The AI editor handles inpainting, outpainting, background removal and replacement, object addition and photo restoration, including scratch repair and colorisation of old images. Because editing sits beside generation, you can produce a base image and immediately fix a hand, swap a backdrop or extend the frame without exporting to another tool. Smart resizing and transparent background export round out the practical, e-commerce-flavoured toolkit.
ControlNet is where getimg.ai earns credibility with serious users. You supply a reference image as a visual blueprint, then layer a text prompt on top, so the model respects edges, poses or composition rather than reinventing them each time. This is the control that pure prompt-to-image tools lack. Alongside it, AI Characters and Styles let you build a reusable subject or aesthetic from a handful of uploaded photos. This feature replaced traditional DreamBooth fine-tuning, which getimg.ai discontinued on 1 March 2026. The new approach is faster and needs no full model training, but it is less granular than the old method, and long-time users noticed the downgrade in control.
Behind the UI sits a REST API with Node, Python and cURL SDKs and endpoints for both images and video. Generation can run sub-second, and pricing is usage-based, starting around $0.015 per image, separate from the subscription plans. For a startup that wants to bake image generation into its own product, this removes the need to run inference infrastructure. Zapier, Make.com and Pabbly Connect integrations extend the same capability into no-code automations.
getimg.ai runs on a credit model priced in euros, which suits European buyers who dislike currency conversion surprises. The free tier grants 100 credits per month with no credit card, enough to test text-to-image generation, though editing and video stay locked. Paid plans open at Entry for 10 euros per month with 3,000 credits and two concurrent generations.
The middle of the range is where most teams land. Core at 30 euros per month gives 15,000 credits per seat and two team seats, while Plus at 65 euros per month adds 35,000 credits, five seats and upscaling to 16K. Ultra sits at 175 euros per month with 100,000 credits for heavy professional use. Annual billing trims 20% off every tier, and Plus and Ultra add on-demand top-ups when a busy month runs the balance dry.
Value is strong if you actually use the breadth. Consolidating a generator, an editor and an upscaler into one 30-euro subscription undercuts stacking separate tools. The catch is credit accounting: images, upscales and video draw from the same pool at different rates, and high-volume users can find the spend harder to forecast than a flat Midjourney seat. For unpredictable production, the API's pay-per-image model is easier to budget.
getimg.ai's legal home is unambiguously European: Webrockets Sp. z o.o. is incorporated in Warsaw and subject to Polish and EU law. Its privacy policy applies GDPR to every user regardless of location and points complainants to the EDPB procedure, with a published subprocessor list. On paper, the governance is sound.
Data residency is the weaker link. The platform runs on AWS and Google Cloud, both US-headquartered providers, and the privacy policy does not commit to storing images exclusively on EU soil. So while the controller is a Polish company under GDPR, the processing may cross borders under standard transfer mechanisms. Organisations with strict data-residency rules should treat getimg.ai as a GDPR-compliant EU company rather than an EU-hosted one, and confirm specifics before uploading sensitive material. That distinction is why the EU compliance score here sits below the level of a genuinely EU-hosted rival.
Multi-tool creators who currently juggle a generator, an editor and an upscaler. If you want those jobs in one subscription with commercial rights included, getimg.ai consolidates them well. If you only ever generate images and never edit, a single-purpose tool is simpler.
Developers and startups who need image generation inside their own product. If you value a usage-based API with Node and Python SDKs over running inference yourself, this fits. If you need enterprise SLAs and named support, the under-ten-person team will feel thin.
Model tinkerers who want to compare FLUX, Seedream and Qwen Image on the same prompt. If choosing the right model per task appeals, the roster is a playground. If you prefer one dependable house style, Midjourney's opinionated output asks less of you.
getimg.ai punches far above the weight of a sub-ten-person bootstrapped team. Folding generation, editing, ControlNet and an API into one euro-priced workspace is a genuinely useful consolidation, and the free tier is generous enough to prove the point before you pay. The compromises are real: infrastructure sits on US clouds so EU hosting is not guaranteed, DreamBooth's removal cost power users some control, and support is only email. For a European creator or developer who wants breadth in one place and can live with those limits, it is one of the strongest Midjourney and Leonardo alternatives built on the continent.
getimg.ai is operated by Webrockets Sp. z o.o., registered in Warsaw, Poland, and subject to Polish and EU law. Its privacy policy applies GDPR to all users and references the EDPB complaint route. However, infrastructure runs on AWS and Google Cloud, so image data is not guaranteed to be stored exclusively on EU servers.
The platform lists 48+ image and video models in one interface, including FLUX, Seedream, Qwen Image, GPT Image and Nano Banana. You switch between them without separate subscriptions, and the roster changes frequently as new models are released.
getimg.ai is a full browser platform with generation, an AI editor, ControlNet and an API, whereas Midjourney is a generation-focused product historically run through Discord. getimg.ai offers more workflow control and developer access; Midjourney is prized for its distinctive default aesthetic.
Yes. New accounts receive 100 free credits per month with no credit card required, enough to test text-to-image generation. Editing and video features are reserved for paid plans, which start at 10 euros per month for the Entry tier.
Traditional DreamBooth fine-tuning was discontinued on 1 March 2026. It was replaced by AI Characters and Styles, which build a reusable custom character or style from a few uploaded photos without training a full model. The process is faster but less granular than the old method.
Open-source FLUX image generation models from the creators of Stable Diffusion
Alternative to Midjourney, Dall E
Amsterdam's design asset marketplace with 6M+ resources and CF Spark AI generation tools
Alternative to Midjourney, Dall E
Polish AI image upscaler with 4xโ16x enhancement, background removal, and API on every plan
Free browser-based FLUX and Stable Diffusion generator with text-to-video, ControlNet, and prepaid API
Alternative to Midjourney, Dall E