Quick answer
To make an image background white: (1) Remove the original background using an AI background remover to get a transparent PNG. (2) Place that transparent PNG on a white canvas in Canva or any image editor and export as JPEG. The full process takes under 60 seconds and requires no Photoshop.
New feature
ImagesTools now adds a white background directly in the tool. After removing the background, click Color → White and download as JPG. No second tool needed. Or choose from gradients, professional scenes, or your own photo. Try it now →

Photo by Nataliya Vaitkevich via Pexels
Amazon requires it. eBay recommends it. Every professional product catalogue uses it. A white background is the standard for product photography — and for good reason. It removes distraction, focuses the buyer on what they're actually buying, and compresses far better than any other background colour. A 5MB product photo on a white background can compress to under 200KB as JPEG. That's not a rounding error.
The problem is that most product photos don't start on white. You photographed the item on a table, a floor, or a lightbox that came out pale grey under your lights. Or a supplier sent you product images against a studio backdrop. Either way, you need to make the image background whitebefore listing — and you don't want to open Photoshop for 200 products.
The fix is a two-step workflow that takes under 60 seconds and requires no paid software.
Why product photos need white backgrounds

Photo by Lum3n via Pexels
Amazon's product image policy is explicit: the main product image must have a pure white background — RGB (255, 255, 255) — with the product filling at least 85% of the image frame. This is not a style preference. Listings with non-white main images are suppressed from search results. (The algorithm checks for background colour. Off-white won't pass.)
Beyond compliance, white backgrounds have practical advantages on every platform:
- Consistent grid appearance. A product grid with mixed backgrounds looks visually noisy. White makes every thumbnail read cleanly at a glance.
- Smaller file sizes. White backgrounds compress extremely well in JPEG. A 5MB unoptimised product photo routinely compresses to under 300KB after background removal and export — a reduction of over 90%. Faster pages, better PageSpeed scores, lower hosting costs.
- Easy to place anywhere. A product on white drops into any banner, mockup, presentation, or catalogue without blending issues. It is the most versatile product asset format.
- Standard for print and print-on-demand. Suppliers like Printful and Printify expect products on white or transparent backgrounds. Anything else requires extra design work on your end.
Amazon's white background requirement means RGB (255, 255, 255) — pure white, not off-white or cream. A background that looks white on your monitor might be #F0F0F0 (240, 240, 240) and still fail the automated compliance check. Removing the background and exporting onto a white canvas guarantees the correct value.
Step-by-step: remove background and add white

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio via Pexels
Making a product photo background white is a two-step process: remove the original background to get a transparent PNG, then place that PNG on a white canvas and export as JPEG. Here is the full workflow.
Step 1: Remove the original background
- Open the ImagesTools Background Remover.
- Upload your product photo. JPEG, PNG, and WebP are accepted. Files up to 10MB on the free plan.
- The AI processes the image in 5–15 seconds and isolates the product from its background.
- Download the result as a transparent PNG. The checkerboard pattern you see in preview means the background is transparent — that is correct and expected.
Step 2: Add a white background
You have several options for the second step, all free:
- Canva (free plan): Create a new design at your target dimensions (2000×2000 px for Amazon square listings is a common choice). The default canvas is white. Upload your transparent PNG, resize it to fill the canvas, then download as JPEG at high quality.
- Windows Paint: Open a new image, set the canvas size to match your PNG dimensions. Paste your transparent PNG onto the white canvas. Save as JPEG.
- Mac Preview: Open your transparent PNG in Preview and export as JPEG. Preview composites onto white automatically when exporting to a format that does not support transparency.
- Any image editor: Open a white canvas at your target dimensions. Place the transparent PNG as a layer on top. Flatten layers and export as JPEG.
The full workflow — background removal, white canvas, JPEG export — takes under 60 seconds for a single product photo. No account required for the background removal step. Files are processed on ImagesTools servers and deleted within one hour.
After adding the white background, export as JPEG at 85–90% quality. White backgrounds compress extremely well — a 4MB product photo typically comes out under 300KB as JPEG at this quality setting. That is small enough for any marketplace listing without sacrificing product clarity.
White background vs transparent: when to use each
After removing a background, you have a transparent PNG. That is the flexible version of the asset — but it is not always what you need. Knowing when to add white versus keeping transparency saves you from doing the same image twice.
| Use case | Use transparent PNG | Use white JPEG |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon main product image | No | Yes — required |
| eBay, Etsy, Shopify listing | No | Yes — recommended |
| Placing product in a mockup | Yes — full placement control | No |
| Website banner or graphic | Yes — adapts to any background | Only if banner is white |
| Print-on-demand suppliers | Yes — standard requirement | Check supplier specs |
| Email or PDF document | No — email clients render transparency as grey | Yes |
| Social media post | No — most platforms flatten to grey | Yes — universal |
The practical rule: keep the transparent PNG when the final destination supports it and you need flexibility. Use white JPEG when the output needs to look the same everywhere — marketplace listings, emails, PDF proposals, social posts.
A useful habit: after removing the background, save both versions — the transparent PNG and the white JPEG. The transparent one is the source asset you will reuse in different contexts. The white JPEG is what you upload today.
Use cases: Amazon, eBay, Etsy, and beyond

Photo by Nataliya Vaitkevich via Pexels
White background product photos come up in more contexts than just Amazon listings. Here is what each major use case actually requires.
Amazon
Pure white background (RGB 255/255/255) on the main product image — this is a hard compliance requirement, not a recommendation. The product must fill at least 85% of the frame. Minimum resolution: 1000 pixels on the longest side. Recommended for zoom: 2000 pixels or larger. Format: JPEG or PNG, under 10MB. Additional images (lifestyle shots, infographics, detail shots) can have any background.
eBay
eBay does not mandate white backgrounds, but eBay's seller photography guide consistently recommends them for higher conversion rates. White backgrounds remove visual clutter and make the product the clear focus of the listing. Minimum image size: 500×500 px. Recommended: 1600 px or larger on the longest side.
Etsy
Etsy has no background colour requirement. Many top-performing Etsy shops use white or very light neutral backgrounds — it is a style convention, not a rule. The minimum recommended image size is 2000 pixels on the shortest side. For handmade goods, clean backgrounds emphasise craftsmanship and product detail without distraction.
Shopify and independent stores
No platform requirement, but consistent white backgrounds make a store look coherent and professional. They also compress significantly better as JPEG — a Shopify store with 200 product images at 300KB each versus 4MB each loads roughly 13× faster on a mobile connection. That difference shows up in bounce rate. Compress the white-background images after export to keep the store fast.
Proposals, presentations, and documents
Freelancers assembling proposals in Google Slides, PowerPoint, or PDF often need product photos that sit cleanly on any slide background. A white background photo works universally. A transparent PNG is more flexible for design work but less reliable in PDFs — some PDF viewers render transparency as grey or black. For documents delivered to clients, white JPEG is the safer choice.
Passport and ID photos
Many governments require official photos against a white background — the US, UK, EU passport standards all specify white or off-white. Government portals sometimes enforce this automatically at upload. The background removal and white canvas workflow applies here too, but you must also resize precisely to the required dimensions (typically 35×45 mm or 2×2 inches at 300 DPI) and ensure the head fills the correct proportion of the frame.
Common problems and how to fix them
AI background removal handles most standard product photos accurately. A few predictable scenarios cause problems — knowing them in advance saves time.
Problem: Edges look rough or fringed
When the product colour is similar to the background — a white mug on a slightly off-white backdrop, for example — the AI struggles to find the boundary cleanly. The fix is to photograph against a contrasting background even if you want white in the final image. Mid-grey, dark blue, or any backdrop with clear contrast from the product gives the AI a clean edge to work with. You are removing that backdrop in the next step anyway.
Problem: The original drop shadow is gone
Background removal removes the background. If there is a drop shadow in the original photo that bleeds into the background area, the AI usually removes that shadow along with the backdrop. If you want the product to cast a soft shadow on the white background — a common Amazon style for premium product listings — add a subtle drop shadow layer in Canva or Photoshop after placing the product on the white canvas.
Problem: Glass or transparent objects have artefacts
AI background removal has a known limitation with transparent, reflective, or semi-translucent objects — perfume bottles, glassware, packaging with cellophane windows. The algorithm sees through them and can remove parts of the product along with the background. For these product types, manual retouching in Photoshop produces cleaner results. The AI tools are significantly more practical for solid, opaque products.
Problem: Background still looks grey after export
This usually happens when your white canvas export lands as off-white — either the canvas in Canva was set to a custom colour, or your export settings applied a colour profile that shifted the whites. Fix: explicitly set the Canva canvas to #FFFFFF before starting, and export as "standard" JPEG (not screen-optimised). In Photoshop, use Image > Mode > sRGB and export as "Save for Web" to guarantee the white values are preserved.
Most of these issues come down to the quality of the original photo, not the tool. Well-lit product photography on a contrasting backdrop processes cleanly in under 10 seconds. Poor lighting, complex backgrounds, or similar product-to-background colours all require more effort — sometimes more than an AI tool can deliver.
For a detailed breakdown of where AI background removal works well and where manual editing is the better call, see the guide on AI background remover vs Photoshop. The short version: for standard product photography — solid objects, clear background contrast, even lighting — AI gets it right more than 95% of the time and takes 10 seconds instead of 10 minutes. (The glass bottle category is genuinely the AI's Achilles heel. Photoshop wins that one.)
If you need to process a large batch of product photos — 50 or 100 images for a store launch or seasonal update — the ImagesTools Background Remover accepts multiple uploads and delivers results you can download individually or as a ZIP. The free plan covers 10 AI operations per month. The Pro plan ($7.99/month) covers 300 operations with a 50MB file size limit — enough for most small to mid-size catalogue refreshes.
If you are not sure whether your product photos will respond well to AI background removal, the guide to removing backgrounds without Photoshop covers the full spectrum of options — including browser-based tools, free desktop software, and when manual selection is genuinely worth the time.
Replace the Background
The white background workflow just got shorter. Previously the two-step process was: (1) remove the background to get a transparent PNG, (2) place it on a white canvas in Canva. Now step 2 happens inside the same tool.
After the AI removes your background, a replacement panel appears with four options:
- Solid color. Click Color → White (#FFFFFF) and download as JPG. That is it. Amazon-compliant pure white, no second tool needed.
- Gradient presets. 10 professionally designed gradients for marketing images, social posts, and presentation backgrounds.
- Professional scenes. Curated Pexels photos across Office, Nature, Studio, Abstract, and Urban categories for lifestyle product shots.
- Custom image. Upload any photo as the background. Drag to reposition and scroll to zoom until the composition is right.
All compositing happens in your browser on canvas — no server round-trip. Download as JPG with the white background applied, or as PNG to keep transparency for design tools.
Remove & replace the background — free, no account required
Upload your product photo. AI removes the background in 5–15 seconds. Then select White from the Color tab and download as JPG — pure white background, ready for Amazon or any marketplace. No watermarks. Files deleted within one hour.
Try Background Remover & Replacer free →Frequently asked questions
Do Amazon and eBay require white product photo backgrounds?+
What is the best format to save a white background product photo?+
Can I make a background white without removing it first?+
How do I remove shadows from a white background product photo?+
Is it free to make image backgrounds white online?+
What resolution do Amazon product photos need to be?+
Can I add a white background directly in the background remover?+
Does adding a white background use extra AI credits?+
Can I also add other backgrounds — not just white?+
Making a product photo background white is not a design project. It is a two-step workflow: remove the background, add white, export as JPEG. The tools for both steps are free. The process takes under a minute per image.
If you are setting up a product catalogue — an Amazon launch, a Shopify refresh, a seasonal eBay batch — the same process scales. Upload multiple images to the background remover, download the transparent PNGs, batch-add the white canvas in Canva, and export. A 50-product catalogue runs through this workflow in an afternoon, not a week.
Upload the photo, remove the background, add white, download the JPEG. That is the whole thing.