PxBee is a free, browser-based photo editor built by Everimaging that runs its whole toolset through AI, with nothing to install. You open it in a tab, drop in an image, and the work happens server-side. The pitch is unusually direct for this corner of software: free, no registration, no watermark on whatever you export. Those three conditions are exactly where most free editors quietly fail, so it is worth checking whether the tools behind the promise are any good.

The catalogue is wide, and it splits cleanly along the kind of edits people actually search for. Background work is the deepest part: a remover that has separate paths for logos, signatures, and pushing a subject onto plain white or plain black, plus a background changer, a transparent-background maker, and a straight PNG converter. Anyone who has spent an afternoon cutting hair or a fuzzy product edge out of a shot will recognise why those variants exist. The signature and logo modes in particular suggest that someone thought about messy real-world inputs, not a clean studio photo prepared specifically for the editor.

The removal set is the other half of the appeal. There is a magic eraser for painting out unwanted objects, a watermark remover that also handles stamps, a person remover for clearing a background figure, and a general picture cleanup pass. Pair those with the enhancement group, covering photo enhancement, HD upscaling, an unblur, and an unpixelate, and PxBee gives you a fairly complete repair bench for damaged or low-resolution source files. The functional coverage matches what paid desktop apps charge a subscription for, which raises an obvious question about how a free product sustains itself, a point the site does not address on its landing surface.

How well any of these perform on real images is the open question. AI erasers and unblur tools vary enormously: some fill a gap convincingly, others smear it in ways that take longer to fix than the original problem. What can be confirmed without pixel-testing is that PxBee is not short on options, and the breadth is the kind of thing that emerges from a team that has watched actual users struggle with the same source-file problems repeatedly.

Editing and generative features

Beyond fixing what is wrong in a photo, PxBee has a modification layer for changing what is there. AI replace and color replace swap out elements or recolour them, the sky replacement drops a new sky into outdoor shots, and there is a generative fill for extending or inventing content inside the frame. The lineup also includes some lighter, consumer-facing tools: a hairstyle changer and a buzz cut filter, which feel aimed more at casual users than at the product photographers named as the core audience.

The extension tools, an AI image extender and an outpainting feature, both grow a picture past its original borders. That combination of repair, replacement, and extension is genuinely useful for e-commerce sellers reformatting one product shot into several aspect ratios. The stated audience, product photographers, online sellers, and content creators across skill levels, lines up with the toolset rather than reading like a generic catch-all. PxBee turns up in at least one business directory aggregating AI-assisted image tools, which puts it alongside paid alternatives that cost considerably more.

On outside opinion the picture is modest. PxBee turns up on topai.tools with 21 reviews and a recommendation rate around 76 percent. That is a small pool, but users who reviewed it were largely positive. It is listed on SourceForge and appears across G2 alternatives and competitor roundups without a standalone star rating surfacing, and there is an editorial comparison from Wondershare, which is a vendor write-up rather than independent user feedback. No Trustpilot, Yelp, Google, or BBB presence came up.

The weak spot is contact information. No phone number, no email, and no physical address appear anywhere in PxBee's public-facing pages. For a free web tool that requires no sign-up, that is less alarming than it would be for a paid service, since there is no account or payment to dispute. Still, if a feature breaks or an export fails, there is no obvious route to ask anyone, and that gap is the clearest mark against an otherwise generous offering. A support form or even a help email would close it.

PxBee is worth opening in a tab and running a real product photo through it. Test the watermark remover and the background variants on your own toughest image first, since those are the features that separate a usable free editor from a frustrating one. The outcome on that one hard image will tell you more about whether PxBee fits your workflow than any summary of its feature list can.