If you only read one section.
AI headshots are appropriate for some uses: internal directories, side projects, very early-career situations where the alternative is a phone selfie. Real photography wins when the headshot will be seen by hiring managers, clients, executives, or board members, or when industry expectations call for it.
What AI headshots actually are.
AI headshot services like HeadshotPro, BetterPic, Aragon AI, and Secta work by training a small AI model on 10 to 30 photos you upload of yourself. The model then generates new images that approximate what you would look like in a professional setting: different outfits, different backdrops, different poses.
The cost is usually $20 to $50 for a batch of 50 to 200 images. Turnaround is one to twelve hours. There is no shoot, no coaching, no back-and-forth. You upload selfies, wait, and download results.
The technology is genuinely impressive and improving quickly. Side by side with results from 2023, today's outputs look meaningfully better. That trend will continue. This is not a piece written by someone who thinks AI is bad at this. It is a piece written by someone who has watched it improve and knows where it still has structural limits.
Where AI headshots actually work.
There are use cases where AI is the right call, or close to it:
- Throwaway profile pictures. Side projects, casual social profiles, pages with no professional stake.
- Very early-career situations. Recent graduates who genuinely do not have $125 for a real session and need something for an entry-level LinkedIn profile while they look for their first job. AI is better than no photo or a phone selfie taken in a parking lot.
- Internal company directories where consistency outranks individuality. Some HR teams want every employee on the same lighting, same backdrop, same crop. AI can produce that, fast, at scale.
- Roles where the photo will never be seen by anyone who has met you in person. Rare, but it exists.
The honest read on AI in these contexts: it is fine. Not impressive. Not embarrassing. Just adequate.
Where AI headshots stop working.
Identity drift.
This is the biggest issue, and it is not going away soon. AI headshots do not look like you. They look like an AI's best interpretation of you, smoothed and idealized in ways that produce a stranger. Your nose is slightly different. Your eyes are slightly bigger. Your jawline is sharper. Cumulatively, the result is a face that is close to you but not actually you. People who know you will notice. People who do not know you yet will form an impression of someone who looks somewhat like the person who shows up to the meeting, but not exactly.
The stranger-at-the-office problem.
Headshots are how people prepare to meet you. When the photo does not match the person who arrives, the prospect's first thirty seconds are spent reconciling the gap. That is not the impression you want to make. For sales, board-level work, client services, and executive search, the mismatch reads as careless or, in worse cases, deceptive.
LinkedIn's AI photo detection.
LinkedIn started flagging AI-generated profile photos in 2025. Detection accuracy is improving. The visibility of the flag varies (some users see a small note, others see a more prominent indicator), but the direction of travel is one-way. Other professional platforms are following.
Revision economics.
This one surprises people. AI headshots cost $25 to $50, but the result is what the result is. If you do not like it, you upload more selfies and try again, and try again, and you often spend $100 to $150 chasing a result that still does not quite look like you. Real photography at $125 to $175 includes the option to reshoot if it is not right. Real wins on revision math more often than people expect.
Verification risk.
Quiet but real. Some security-conscious organizations (banks, government contractors, executive search firms) treat AI-generated photos as identity-verification flags. The threshold for triggering varies. The trend is toward stricter screening.
A direct comparison.
The same factors, different answers depending on which path you choose.
| Factor | AI Headshots | Real Photography |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | $25 to $50 | $125 to $1,200+ |
| Time investment | 1 to 12 hours waiting | 30-minute session, same-day delivery |
| Visual accuracy | Approximation of you | Actually you |
| Revision ability | Limited; pay to retry | Built in |
| Professional credibility | Industry-dependent | Universal |
| LinkedIn AI flagging | Increasing risk | None |
| Identity verification | Increasing risk | None |
| Team consistency | High (same source model) | Achievable with one photographer |
| Update cost over 3 years | Repeated full price | Lower (relationship with photographer) |
Different industries, different answers.
Where your work happens matters more than how you personally feel about AI photos. A short read by sector:
- Tech, startups, creative agencies. AI photos are increasingly common and often accepted. Lower risk of negative perception.
- Real estate. Risky. Real estate is a face-forward profession. Clients meet you. A photo that does not match you is a trust problem.
- Healthcare. Patients value continuity and authenticity. AI photos read as cold or distant. Especially problematic for clinicians whose patients see the photo before the appointment.
- Law and finance. Conservative industries with high trust requirements. AI photos read as careless. The convention is real photography.
- Executive and board roles. Universally real. The level of scrutiny rules AI out entirely.
- Government and education. Real, with traditional backdrops often expected.
- Sales and business development. Real. The relationship business demands authenticity.
If you are not sure where your industry lands, look at the headshots of senior people you respect in your field. Their photos are real almost without exception.
How to choose for your specific situation.
Ask yourself these questions in order. Stop at the first yes:
- Will anyone who sees this photo eventually meet you in person? If yes, real.
- Are you in an industry that values authenticity (almost all of them)? If yes, real.
- Will the photo be on a public-facing professional platform like LinkedIn? If yes, real (especially as AI flagging spreads).
- Are you applying for jobs, building a client base, or representing a company publicly? If yes, real.
- Is this purely for an internal directory where everyone is using the same AI service for consistency? If yes, AI is fine.
- Is this for a throwaway profile with no professional stake? If yes, AI or even a phone selfie is fine.
For most people booking a headshot, the answer to one of the first four questions is yes. Real photography is the correct call.
Common questions, direct answers.
Are AI headshots good enough for LinkedIn?
For some users, yes. For most professionals using LinkedIn for career advancement, networking, or business development, the risk of the photo not matching reality (and increasingly, of being flagged as AI) outweighs the cost savings.
Will people know my headshot is AI?
Often, yes. There are visual tells: skin texture that is slightly too smooth, eyes that are slightly too symmetric, backgrounds with a soft AI look. Detection is getting easier as people become more familiar with the genre.
Do AI photos actually look like me?
Close, not exactly. AI models smooth and idealize, which produces a version of you that is recognizable as kind of you but not actually you. People who know you well will notice the difference immediately.
Are AI headshots cheaper than real photography in the long run?
Not always. If the first AI batch is not right and you keep retrying, costs add up. Real photography includes revision built in. Across two or three years of use, a $125 real headshot you actually like is often cheaper than several rounds of AI iteration that never quite work.
Is LinkedIn really flagging AI photos?
Yes, since 2025. The flag visibility varies and the system is not perfect, but the trend is toward more prominent labeling. Other professional platforms are following.
Will AI replace professional photographers?
For some commodity use cases, yes. For high-stakes professional contexts where the photo represents you to clients, employers, and partners, no, at least not for the foreseeable future. The category most at risk is low-end commodity headshots. Mid-market and above is largely unaffected.
I already paid for AI headshots. What should I do?
If they look like you and you are happy with them, use them. If they do not, real photography is your fix. You have not wasted the AI money. You have gotten useful information about what does not work for your face.