There was a time when stock photography had a bit of a reputation problem.
You know the sort of thing.
Perfectly polished office workers laughing hysterically at spreadsheets. Headset operators smiling with the emotional intensity of somebody being held hostage just outside frame. Men in suits high fiving over absolutely nothing.
Odd times.
Thankfully, stock photography in 2026 is generally far better. Images now tend to feel more authentic, natural and useful, especially for smaller businesses wanting to improve their websites without commissioning expensive custom photography.
A good stock image should support your website, not make visitors wonder why your accountant is posing on a skateboard.
What is a stock photo?
A stock photo is simply a professionally created image licensed for use by individuals and businesses.
Instead of hiring a photographer for every image on your website, you can legally licence existing photos from stock image libraries.
Modern stock libraries now contain millions of images covering virtually every topic imaginable including:
- Businesses and offices
- Food and hospitality
- Trades and construction
- Travel and tourism
- Lifestyle photography
- Pets wearing suspiciously human expressions
- Dogs in shower caps
Especially dogs in shower caps.
What’s the difference between free and royalty free images?
This is where many people understandably get confused.
“Free” and “royalty free” are not actually the same thing.
Free stock photos
Free stock image websites allow you to use images without paying a licence fee.
In many cases, the images can also be used commercially on business websites, social media and marketing materials.
Popular free stock photo websites include:
- Unsplash
- Pexels
- Pixabay
- Burst
- Reshot
Many of these platforms now offer genuinely excellent photography, particularly for modern lifestyle and small business imagery.
Royalty free stock photos
Despite the slightly misleading name, royalty free images are usually not free.
The term “royalty free” simply means you pay once for the licence rather than paying ongoing royalties every time the image is used.
You buy the image licence and can then generally continue using the image under the terms of that licence.
Popular royalty free stock image websites include:
- Shutterstock
- Adobe Stock
- iStock
- 123RF
- Depositphotos
So which should you use?
Honestly? Both have their place.
Free stock websites are fantastic for:
- Blog articles
- General website visuals
- Social media graphics
- Placeholder imagery
- Small business websites on tighter budgets
Paid royalty free libraries often become useful when you need:
- More niche imagery
- Higher quality business photography
- Very specific concepts
- Exclusive looking visuals
- Commercial licensing reassurance
The problem with overused stock photography
Stock photos are helpful, but there is one major catch.
Some images become so widely used that they start appearing absolutely everywhere.
If visitors have subconsciously seen the same smiling businesswoman on twelve different websites already, the image stops feeling authentic very quickly.
This is why modern website design increasingly benefits from combining stock photography with:
- Real team photos
- Original project photography
- Behind the scenes content
- Local imagery
- Brand personality
In 2026, authenticity matters far more than looking overly polished.
AI generated images vs stock photos
AI image generators are now everywhere and many businesses are experimenting with them for website visuals.
Sometimes the results are genuinely impressive.
Sometimes the results contain six fingered accountants drinking coffee from floating mugs while sitting inside impossible furniture.
AI images can absolutely work for:
- Concept visuals
- Background artwork
- Illustrative blog imagery
- Creative mockups
But for trust based businesses especially, genuine photography still tends to feel more believable and reassuring.
My honest stock photo advice?
Avoid anything that feels painfully generic.
Choose imagery that reflects the personality of your business rather than simply filling empty space on a page.
And if your website happens to feature a windswept dog dressed for an apocalyptic ramble across the Yorkshire moors while discussing stock photography? Frankly, even better.
Honestly, that probably makes the page more memorable.
Final thoughts
Stock photography remains an incredibly useful tool for modern websites.
The key is choosing images carefully rather than filling pages with generic corporate wallpaper.
Good visuals help websites feel more professional, approachable and engaging.