Spot Healing Brush Tool Online Free

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Controls

Brush Settings
Size20px
Hardness50%
Zoom
100%
Tips

• Click or drag to heal areas
• Use scroll wheel to zoom
• Hold Alt + drag to pan
• Ctrl+Z to undo

Upload one photo, paint over blemishes or small distractions with the healing brush, adjust brush size and hardness, zoom in for detail work, undo strokes if needed, and download the retouched image. No registration is required.

How to Use Spot Healing Brush

  1. Upload your photo.
  2. Adjust the brush size so it is slightly larger than the spot you want to remove.
  3. Click or drag over the blemish or unwanted object.
  4. Download the retouched image when the result looks right.

Key Features

Quick Blemish Cleanup

Tap on small spots and marks to smooth them out without a full manual retouching workflow.

Brush Size Control

Match the brush to the mark you want to fix so the repair stays focused on the right area.

Natural Blending

The tool pulls nearby texture and tone into the repaired area so the fix looks more even.

Frequently Asked Questions

The spot healing brush is a retouching tool that automatically blends nearby pixels over a small area you click or paint. It is most useful for removing minor blemishes, acne, sensor dust, tiny stains, skin specks, and other small distractions without having to manually copy from another part of the photo.

It works best on small, isolated imperfections such as pimples, acne marks, dust spots, lint, tiny scars, and similar distractions in fairly even areas of an image. If you need to remove a large object, repair a strong edge, or rebuild a complex background, a more advanced clone or object removal tool will usually give better results.

Set the brush just slightly larger than the mark you want to fix. That gives the tool enough surrounding texture and color to blend the repair naturally while keeping the edit focused on the problem area. If the result looks soft or smeared, reduce the brush size and heal the spot in a few smaller passes instead of one broad stroke.

Yes. Clicking is usually best for small round spots such as blemishes or dust marks, while dragging works better for short scratches or slightly longer imperfections. For cleaner results, retouch small sections at a time instead of brushing over a large area in a single pass.

No. The editing runs locally in your browser, so your image stays on your device while you use the spot healing brush. The tool does not upload your photo to a remote server for processing.