Guide · PixTagger
Alternative to PixTagger
An honest look at PixTagger for microstock contributors — Getty controlled vocabulary, three-frame video analysis, batch limits, one-time pricing, and when to consider a multi-agency alternative.
If you contribute to Getty Images or iStock, you have likely felt the pain of Getty's controlled vocabulary — the official list of approved keywords that your CSV must match before your upload clears validation. Generic AI taggers hand you a list of English words and leave the disambiguation to you. PixTagger was built to solve exactly that problem.
This guide covers what PixTagger does, who it fits best, where its limits show, and what to weigh before you make it your primary keywording tool.
What PixTagger offers
PixTagger is a browser-based keywording tool built specifically for Getty Images and iStock contributors. Its core promise is that every keyword in your exported CSV is drawn from Getty's official controlled vocabulary whitelist — so your submission clears ESP validation on the first attempt.
On its public product pages and FAQ, PixTagger highlights:
- Getty controlled vocabulary whitelist — every exported keyword is checked against Getty's approved list before it reaches your CSV
- Getty ESP CSV — filename, created date, title, description, country, brief code, up to 50 controlled-vocabulary keywords, import-ready for Getty and iStock
- Adobe Stock CSV — up to 49 keywords ordered by search weight for Adobe's ranking algorithm
- Meta hashtag export — for Instagram and X
- Multi-frame video analysis — three frames (start, middle, end) analyzed per clip; detects camera movement such as Zoom In, Panning, and Tracking Shot that single-frame tools miss
- Browser-local video processing — full video files are read and resized locally; only resized frames are sent to the AI
- Shoot Notes — optional context (location, model, brief, lighting) applied once to the whole batch for sharper results
- Inline keyword editing — click to remove or type to add before export; original AI output is preserved in account history
- Stacked drops — multiple drops combine into one export CSV; re-dropping a file already in the session is skipped at no extra charge
- Free trial — 15 credits on signup, no credit card required
PixTagger sells one-time credit packs with no subscription and no expiry. One credit covers one photo or one video, regardless of file size or length.
Who PixTagger is built for
PixTagger earns its positioning for a specific type of contributor:
- You submit primarily to Getty Images or iStock. The controlled vocabulary whitelist is PixTagger's central feature. If Getty or iStock is your main agency, avoiding rejection emails and 2 a.m. cleanup sessions is a genuine daily win.
- You keyword video as well as photos. The three-frame video pipeline — with camera-movement detection — is more sophisticated than single-thumbnail analysis. Mixed-shoot contributors who want one tool for both media types will find the workflow familiar.
- You prefer paying once rather than monthly. Credits never expire. Seasonal shooters or back-catalog cleaners can buy a pack during a slow month and draw on it across quarters without subscription anxiety.
- Your batches run under 100 photos per drop. The per-drop limit is 100 photos or 30 videos. Multiple drops stack into a single CSV, so larger shoots require more manual steps rather than a single queued job.
- You value practitioner credibility over brand marketing. PixTagger was built by an exclusive Getty and iStock contributor since 2005 (55,000+ accepted photos, 10,000+ video clips) and is in private beta with 30 initial spots. The early testimonials come from named Getty exclusives in the same contributor community.
If your workflow is “shoot → drop in browser → download Getty CSV,” PixTagger is designed precisely for that path.
PixTagger pricing (June 2026)
PixTagger uses one-time credit packs — no subscription, no monthly billing. Credits never expire. 1 credit = 1 photo or 1 video.
| Pack | Credits | Price | Approx. $/file | Batch limit per drop |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter | 200 | $9 | ~$0.045 | 100 photos / 30 videos |
| Pro | 1,000 | $29 | ~$0.029 | 100 photos / 30 videos |
| Studio | 5,000 | $99 | ~$0.020 | 100 photos / 30 videos |
Beta testers receive 200 bonus credits on top of the 15 free on signup (limited to 30 spots). The free trial requires no credit card.
Confirm current pack prices on stockpixtagger.com before you buy — pricing may change after the beta period closes.
Workflow strengths
Getty controlled vocabulary, native. This is PixTagger's clearest advantage. The pipeline runs vision AI, builds a keyword list, and filters every term through Getty's official approved whitelist before it reaches your CSV. The result is an ESP-ready file that does not need a disambiguation pass in the agency portal. For Getty and iStock contributors who have spent hours correcting “landscape” to “landscape - scenery,” that matters immediately.
Three-frame video analysis. Rather than analyzing a single thumbnail, PixTagger extracts frames from the beginning, middle, and end of each clip. This catches motion types — Zoom In, Panning, Tracking Shot, Aerial View — that a static thumbnail approach misses. For video-heavy contributors, this is a material improvement over generic tagging.
Privacy-friendly video handling. Full video files never upload to a server. The browser reads and resizes frames locally; only the compressed frames are sent to the AI. This matters for contributors working with unreleased or sensitive footage.
Shoot Notes for batch context. Typing a location, model description, or shoot brief once applies that context to every file in the drop. This produces more relevant, commercially specific keywords than uploading cold images with no scene context.
One-time pricing with no expiry. There is no subscription to cancel and no credits disappearing at month-end. A contributor with an irregular upload schedule can buy the Studio pack once and work through it over the year.
Limitations to know before you commit
Private beta with 30 spots. PixTagger is still in private beta as of June 2026. Product features, pricing, and batch limits may change before or after general availability. If you need a production-stable tool today, factor in the maturity risk.
Drop cap of 100 photos or 30 videos. Each drop is capped at 100 photos or 30 videos. Batches do stack into a single combined CSV export, so processing 500 photos means five separate drops. For high-volume contributors running back-catalog sprints or AI-image batches in the thousands, this adds friction compared to tools that queue an entire job at once.
Getty-first coverage, limited elsewhere. PixTagger exports Adobe Stock CSV and Meta hashtags alongside the Getty CSV, but its marketing, FAQ, and feature depth are clearly Getty-centric. There are no named Shutterstock-specific presets, no Bridge TSV export, no IPTC/XMP ZIP for bulk metadata embedding, and no Dreamstime or Depositphotos formats. Multi-agency contributors who need one workflow for five or six platforms will need to supplement.
No API or automation path. PixTagger is a browser-only tool. There is no customer API, no webhook, and no programmatic batch submission. Studios, integrators, or contributors building automated pipelines (for example, through Photo Mechanic or a custom upload script) cannot connect PixTagger into that flow.
English-first metadata. PixTagger does not publicize multilingual output support. Contributors distributing across agencies in Germany, France, or other non-English markets who want titles and descriptions in local languages will need to handle translation separately.
Higher per-image cost at volume. At the Studio pack level, PixTagger runs approximately $0.020 per file. Contributors processing 10,000+ images per month will find this significantly more expensive than monthly subscription tools at comparable volume.
FAQ about PixTagger
Does PixTagger actually use Getty's official controlled vocabulary?
Yes. According to PixTagger's FAQ, the Getty CSV export uses Getty's official whitelist of approved keywords, so submissions should not be rejected for invalid terms. The pipeline filters every generated keyword against that whitelist before it reaches your export.
How many files can I process in one drop?
Each drop is limited to 100 photos or 30 videos. You can run multiple drops and they stack into a single combined CSV export. Re-dropping a file already in the session does not charge another credit.
Do PixTagger credits expire?
No. PixTagger sells one-time credit packs with no subscription. Credits stay on your account until you use them — there is no monthly billing and nothing to cancel.
Does PixTagger support video keywording?
Yes. PixTagger supports MP4, MOV, and M4V files and uses three-frame analysis (start, middle, end) to detect camera movement and scene changes. Full video files are processed locally in the browser; only compressed frames are sent to the AI. Each video counts as one credit.
Is PixTagger only for Getty and iStock?
No — PixTagger also exports an Adobe Stock CSV (up to 49 keywords, ordered by search weight) and Meta hashtags. However, the product's deepest feature work and marketing focus is clearly the Getty controlled vocabulary pipeline. Shutterstock-specific presets, Bridge TSV, and IPTC/XMP bulk embedding are not currently offered.
Is PixTagger available to everyone right now?
As of June 2026, PixTagger is in private beta with 30 spots. A free trial of 15 credits is available on signup with no credit card. Beta testers receive an additional 200 bonus credits as a thank-you for feedback.
Looking for an alternative to PixTagger?
PixTagger solves a real problem — Getty controlled vocabulary compliance — but if your workflow goes beyond Getty and iStock, or if you process more than a few hundred files per session, AI Keywording covers the broader microstock production line that PixTagger does not reach.
AI Keywording is a browser-first keywording tool built for contributors who run large multi-agency batches, need named export presets for every major agency, and want Getty/iStock disambiguation without giving up Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, or Bridge workflows:
| PixTagger | AI Keywording | |
|---|---|---|
| Product status | Private beta (30 spots) | Production SaaS |
| Batch limit | 100 photos / 30 videos per drop (stackable) | Up to 10,000 images per job |
| Getty / iStock CV | Whitelist-native, ESP-ready CSV | Supported (disambiguation) |
| Adobe Stock export | CSV (49 kw) | Adobe V2 CSV + Bridge TSV |
| Shutterstock export | Not offered | Shutterstock-specific export |
| IPTC / XMP embed | Not offered | IPTC/XMP ZIP download |
| Pricing at 10,000 images | ~$0.020–0.029/img (Studio/Pro packs, $99–$290) | ~$0.003/img (Scale plan, $129 / 42,000 images) |
| Subscription option | One-time packs only | Starter $20 / Growth $59 / Scale $129 or PAYG $0.04/image |
| Languages | English-first | 100+ languages |
| API access | Browser-only | Customer API available |
| Video support | 3-frame analysis, browser-local | Photo-first today |
Choose PixTagger if Getty or iStock is your primary agency, you need CV-compliant CSVs without manual cleanup, you keyword video regularly, and your sessions stay under a few hundred files per batch.
Consider AI Keywording if you submit to multiple agencies, run thousand-image batches, need named export formats for Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, Bridge, or IPTC/XMP embedding, want 100+ language metadata output, or need a customer API for automated workflows — and especially when per-image cost at high volume matters.
The bottom line
PixTagger is a focused, practitioner-built tool that solves one of the most frustrating parts of contributing to Getty Images and iStock: controlled vocabulary compliance. The Getty CV whitelist filter, three-frame video analysis, and browser-local video processing are genuine, well-executed differentiators for that niche.
The trade-offs are real: private beta status, 100-photo drop limits, no Shutterstock or Bridge presets, no API, and a per-image cost that compounds quickly at high volume. For contributors who submit across five agencies, process thousands of images per sprint, or need a production-stable tool with a customer API, the limitations matter before you standardize on PixTagger as your primary workflow.
The best fit depends on your agency mix and batch size. If Getty is your world and your sessions stay under a few hundred files, PixTagger earns a serious look. If you run at scale across agencies, compare your real export requirements and monthly volume before you commit.