10 Best AI Face Retouching Apps in 2026: Facetune vs Remini vs Evoto vs Lovart

Lovart Team·May 1, 2026

Most AI Face Retouching Makes Everyone Look Like the Same Person. The Better Tools Actually Understand Individual Faces.

AI face retouching has a "same face" problem. Feed ten different portraits into most retouching apps and the output will be ten versions of the same generic face: the same skin texture (none), the same jaw contour, the same eye size, the same catchlight position. The AI isn't enhancing your photo — it's replacing your features with a dataset average of what "attractive" means.

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The tools that solve this use facial structure preservation — recognizing and maintaining the specific ratios, shapes, and features that make a face individual — while selectively enhancing the aspects that benefit from AI processing: skin texture, lighting balance, eye sharpness, and subtle feature refinement. The difference is between "you, but better" and "a different, generically attractive person who vaguely resembles you."

The Spec Sheet Lie: "Natural Enhancement" Often Means "Plastic Skin and Alien Eyes"

The phrase "natural enhancement" in face retouching marketing typically means one of two things: the tool applies the same smoothing filter at 70% opacity instead of 100% (you get "natural-ish" plastic skin), or the tool uses AI to selectively retouch — preserving texture where it looks natural and enhancing where it doesn't. Only the second approach produces genuinely natural results. Here's how ten tools compare.

The 10 Best AI Face Retouching Apps

1. Facetune — Best for Social Media Portraits

Facetune is the most popular face retouching app by cultural footprint. It offers AI-powered skin smoothing, face reshaping, makeup application, and lighting adjustments designed for social media selfies.

What it does well: Feature breadth — every aspect of face retouching is covered: skin smoothing, blemish removal, eye brightening, teeth whitening, face reshaping, makeup application, hair recoloring. The controls are intuitive — sliders and tap-to-adjust. The AI auto-detect identifies retouching opportunities (detect blemishes, suggest adjustments). Social media integration is seamless.

Where it falls short: The default processing is aggressive — "natural" requires manually dialing back every slider. The face reshaping tools, while powerful, can produce unnatural results when overused (the "Facetune face" phenomenon). Subscription pricing is premium ($9.99/month for VIP). Privacy — your faces are uploaded to servers for processing.

Key takeaway: The most feature-rich face retouching app. Requires restraint to achieve natural results.

2. Remini — Best for Face Enhancement & Restoration

Remini's face enhancement capabilities have made it the viral leader in AI portrait improvement. Its generative model reconstructs facial detail from low-resolution, noisy, or compressed portrait photos.

What it does well: Face reconstruction from poor-quality sources is the best in the consumer category — old scanned photos, low-resolution social media downloads, compressed messaging app images all get strikingly improved facial detail. The "enhance" transformation reveals genuine-looking detail (pores, eyelashes, catchlights). The mobile app is simple to use.

Where it falls short: The enhancement is generative — the AI creates detail that looks realistic but may not match the actual person's features. Non-face photo enhancement is average to poor. The subscription model is aggressive ($9.99/week for Pro — weekly!). The AI "smoothing + sharpening" can produce the plastic-skin-with-sharp-outlines artifact.

Key takeaway: Best-in-class for bringing old, damaged, or low-resolution portraits back to life. Not for accurate commercial portraiture.

3. Evoto — Best for Professional Portrait Workflow

Evoto is a desktop application built for professional portrait retouchers. It processes RAW files with AI-powered batch retouching across hundreds of features — skin, eyes, mouth, face shape, hair, makeup, body.

What it does well: Professional workflow — batch process hundreds of portraits with consistent retouching settings. RAW file support with professional color management. The retouching granularity is unmatched — individual controls for skin texture, pore visibility, undereye circles, lip color, hair flyaways, and dozens more. Presets for consistent output across a shoot.

Where it falls short: Desktop-only (Windows/Mac) with no mobile or web version. Expensive for casual use ($15.99/month or $127.99/year). The interface is technical and assumes portrait retouching knowledge. Processing large batches requires a capable computer. Overwhelming feature set for casual retouching.

Key takeaway: The professional portrait retoucher's tool. Overkill and overpriced for anyone who isn't processing portraits in volume.

4. Luminar Neo — Best for Photographer-Grade Enhancement

Luminar Neo is a full photo editor with face-specific AI tools built into a broader photographic editing suite. Its Face AI, Skin AI, and Portrait Bokeh AI features enable professional-grade portrait enhancement.

What it does well: Photographic context — face retouching happens alongside exposure, color grading, lens correction, and composition adjustments in the same editor. The AI tools are tastefully designed — default settings are conservative and "photographic" rather than "beauty app." The lighting adjustments (Face Light, Eye Light) work subtly. RAW support.

Where it falls short: It's a full photo editor, not a dedicated retouching app — the face tools are a feature set, not the entire product. Pricing is photo-editor pricing ($9.95/month or $99/year). Desktop-only on the full version. The AI suggestions can sometimes miss (detecting faces in non-portrait images, applying unwanted adjustments).

Key takeaway: Best for photographers who want face retouching as part of a complete photo editing workflow, not a standalone retouching experience.

5. Photoshop Neural Filters — Best for Adobe Ecosystem Users

Photoshop's Neural Filters include Skin Smoothing, Smart Portrait (expression/age/gaze/pose adjustment), and Makeup Transfer — AI-powered face retouching within the industry-standard editing environment.

What it does well: Adobe ecosystem integration — retouch faces with AI, then use Photoshop's full toolset for precision adjustments. The Smart Portrait filter (adjust gaze direction, head pose, expression, age) is uniquely powerful. Non-destructive workflow — filters apply on separate layers. Professional export and color management.

Where it falls short: Requires Photoshop subscription ($22.99+/month). Neural Filters are cloud-processed — no offline retouching. The filters are helpful but not class-leading — dedicated retouching tools like Evoto and Facetune offer more face-specific features. Photoshop's complexity is overwhelming for retouching-only users.

Key takeaway: The choice for Photoshop users who want AI face retouching integrated into their existing workflow. The Photoshop subscription tax is significant for retouching-only use.

6. BeautyPlus — Best for Asian Beauty Standards

BeautyPlus is a massively popular face retouching app in Asian markets, with AI features tuned for Asian beauty standards — skin tone adjustment, face slimming, eye enlargement, and "glass skin" effects.

What it does well: Aesthetic tuning for Asian beauty preferences that Western apps don't address — skin tone brightening, V-line face shaping, aegyo-sal (under-eye fat) enhancement. The makeup application features are sophisticated and culturally specific. The "natural" mode is genuinely subtle when enabled. Live camera retouching for real-time preview.

Where it falls short: The default settings are heavily biased toward specific beauty standards — users outside those preferences will need to disable or reverse many defaults. Heavy monetization — most features require subscription ($9.99/month). Privacy concerns (China-based company). The app can feel cluttered with ads and upsell prompts.

Key takeaway: The best face retouching app for users who prefer Asian beauty aesthetic defaults. Others will spend time disabling features.

7. YouCam Perfect — Best for Full-Body Photo Enhancement

YouCam Perfect extends AI retouching beyond the face to full-body enhancement — body shaping, height adjustment, skin smoothing for arms/legs, and outfit recoloring.

What it does well: Full-body retouching that face-only apps don't address — body slimming, leg lengthening, posture adjustment, muscle definition. The AI cutout for background replacement is reliable. The "beautification" camera provides real-time retouching while taking photos. Good social media export options.

Where it falls short: Face retouching quality is good but not best-in-class — Facetune and Remini produce better facial results. The body reshaping features raise ethical concerns when pushed to extremes. Heavy monetization. The real-time beauty camera can be disorienting (seeing a retouched version of yourself as you photograph).

Key takeaway: The choice when you need full-body enhancement alongside face retouching. For face-only work, dedicated face tools perform better.

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8. AirBrush — Best for Quick, One-Tap Retouching

AirBrush focuses on speed — one-tap AI retouching that produces presentable results in seconds. It's designed for people who want a better selfie now, not a retouching education.

What it does well: Speed — the one-tap "Magic" retouch produces acceptably enhanced portraits faster than any competitor. The interface is the simplest in the category. Good for quick social media posts where speed matters more than perfection. The "natural" preset is genuinely restrained.

Where it falls short: One-tap means no customization — you accept the AI's judgment or you switch to the (more complex) manual mode. Face enhancement quality is behind Facetune and Remini. The feature set is smaller than competitors. The AI sometimes makes puzzling choices (brightening already-bright areas, smoothing already-smooth skin).

Key takeaway: The fastest path from selfie to shareable portrait. For retouching where you want control, other tools offer more.

9. Perfect365 — Best for Virtual Makeup

Perfect365 is primarily a virtual makeup application — AI-powered makeup try-on with face retouching as a secondary feature. It's used by makeup brands for virtual product trials.

What it does well: Virtual makeup application is the best in the category — lipstick, eyeshadow, foundation, contour, brows, lashes with realistic rendering. Brand partnerships provide actual makeup product colors (try on MAC lipstick, Urban Decay eyeshadow). The makeup looks are created by professional makeup artists. Good for content creators filming beauty content.

Where it falls short: Face retouching is secondary to makeup — skin smoothing and blemish removal are present but basic. The app pushes its brand-partnered products aggressively. The free tier is a vehicle for brand advertising. Not a general-purpose face retouching tool.

Key takeaway: The tool for trying on and applying virtual makeup. For actual face retouching, dedicated retouching apps do it better.

10. Lovart — Best for Production-Ready Portrait Enhancement

Lovart's face retouching is part of its AI Design Agent system. Enhanced portraits live on the ChatCanvas where they can be immediately composed into designs, combined with brand elements, and exported in production formats.

What it does well: Retouching-to-design pipeline. Enhance a portrait and immediately place it in a team page layout, social post, presentation, marketing asset, or brand material on the same canvas. Brand Kit ensures retouching style matches brand aesthetics. Touch Edit for selective facial feature refinement. Batch processing for multiple portraits. Free tier includes face retouching.

Where it falls short: The retouching is designed for commercial-quality output — clean, professional, brand-appropriate — not for the extreme beautification that consumer apps offer. Professional portrait retouching depth (individual pore-level control, professional color management) is behind Evoto. Not a beauty app — no makeup application, no extreme reshaping.

Key takeaway: Lovart wins for commercial portrait production where enhanced faces become part of designed marketing assets — team pages, brand campaigns, social media content — with consistent branding, not for personal selfie beautification.

Comparison Table

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Verdict

For social media selfie enhancement with maximum control: Facetune. For restoring old, damaged, or low-resolution portraits: Remini. For professional portrait retouching in volume: Evoto. For photographer-grade enhancement within a full editing workflow: Luminar Neo. For Photoshop users who want AI retouching integrated: Photoshop Neural Filters. For Asian beauty aesthetic preferences: BeautyPlus. For full-body enhancement alongside face: YouCam Perfect. For the fastest, simplest retouching: AirBrush. For virtual makeup try-on: Perfect365. For commercial production where retouched portraits become part of designed marketing assets: Lovart.

FAQ

Why do AI-retouched faces sometimes look "waxy" or plastic?

The "waxy" artifact occurs when the AI applies aggressive skin smoothing (reducing texture variation to remove blemishes) and then sharpens facial feature edges. The result is perfectly smooth skin with hard outlines — a combination that doesn't occur naturally. Human skin has micro-texture (pores, fine lines, variations in tone) even on the most flawless faces. Tools that preserve some texture while reducing blemishes (Evoto, Luminar Neo, Lovart) avoid the wax effect.

Can AI face retouching fix a blurry photo?

Yes, with generative tools like Remini and Lovart. Standard algorithmic retouching (smoothing, sharpening) can enhance a slightly soft photo but can't fix significant blur. Generative face enhancement reconstructs facial detail that wasn't captured. This is impressive but creates a philosophical question: the "fixed" photo contains AI-generated detail that may not match reality.

Is it ethical to use AI face retouching?

Context-dependent. For personal social media, minor enhancement (lighting, skin balance) is widely accepted. For professional headshots where accuracy matters, disclose AI enhancement if the image is used in contexts where authenticity is expected (journalism, legal, dating apps with "recent photo" expectations). The ethical line shifts when retouching alters fundamental features — reshaping face structure, changing apparent age, modifying body proportions — especially in commercial advertising where such alterations can promote unrealistic standards.

Can these tools retouch faces in group photos?

Most can, with caveats. Evoto and Photoshop handle group photos best — individual face detection and separate retouching parameters per face. Consumer apps typically apply uniform retouching to all detected faces, which can produce inconsistent results if faces have different lighting, skin tones, or angles. Group photo retouching is most successful when faces are clearly visible and similarly lit.

What's the difference between face retouching and face swapping?

Face retouching enhances the existing face — smoother skin, brighter eyes, adjusted lighting — while preserving the person's identity. Face swapping replaces the face entirely with a different face. Remini and Lovart offer both capabilities, but they're distinct features with different use cases and ethical considerations.

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