The Real Talk
Photo enhancement tools are everywhere. Every app promises to make your photos look professional. After testing the three biggest names—Topaz Labs, Lightroom, and ON1—I have opinions.
Why This Test Matters
I edit photos for clients. Not just “make it look better” edits, but actual professional retouching. When I say these tools, I mean it.
This is not about which app has the prettiest interface. This is about which one actually helps you get work done.
Topaz Labs: The AI Powerhouse
Topaz has become the go-to for photographers who want AI-assisted enhancement without learning complex techniques.
What Actually Works
The Gigapixel AI is genuinely impressive. Upscaling a photo from 12MP to 48MP sounds impossible, but the results are surprisingly good. Not magic—you can still see the difference if you look closely—but good enough for many uses.
I used this for a client project where the original photos were too small for print. The client needed 24×36 inch posters from 12MP phone shots. Gigapixel made it possible. Would I want to print it at billboard size? No. But for standard print sizes, it worked.
DeNoise AI handles ISO noise better than anything I have tried. Late-night event photography, high ISO shots, anything that would have been unusable before—this fixes it.
My test: A concert photo shot at ISO 12800. Previous tools would either leave visible noise or destroy detail trying to remove it. DeNoise found the balance. Still not as clean as a native low-ISO shot, but usable in ways it was not before.
Sharpen AI is solid for fixing focus issues. Not perfect, but it salvages shots that would otherwise be trash. I recovered a batch of event photos where the autofocus missed on some shots. Sharpen made them usable.
The standalone apps mean you can use them without committing to a full editing workflow. That flexibility matters when you have existing tools you like. I use Lightroom for everything, but sometimes I need to send a file to Topaz for specific processing, then bring it back.
Where It Falls Short
The subscription model frustrates people. Yes, perpetual licenses exist, but they are expensive upfront. The annual subscription feels like a rental you never own. At $9.99/month, you never own anything, and the price can increase whenever Adobe decides.
Each app is separate. You buy Gigapixel, you do not automatically get DeNoise. The bundled pricing is better but still adds up. If you want all three, the $199 bundle is the smart choice, but that is a meaningful investment.
Learning curve is real despite the “AI does it for you” marketing. Getting the best results requires understanding what each tool does and when to use it. The AI makes decisions, but you still need to guide those decisions.
Lightroom: The Industry Standard
Adobe Lightroom is what most professionals use. There is a reason for that.
What Actually Works
The non-destructive editing workflow is industry standard for a reason. You never touch your original file, all edits are reversible, and you can come back to any edit at any time. This alone saves projects when clients change their minds about edits.
The ecosystem integration is unmatched. If you use Photoshop, Bridge, or any Adobe product, Lightroom fits seamlessly. Cloud storage syncs across devices. I start an edit on my desktop, continue on my laptop on the train, and finish on my tablet at the coffee shop. That integration matters.
The preset system is powerful once you learn it. Batch applying edits across hundreds of photos, creating your own looks, sharing presets with others—workflow stuff that saves hours. I have presets for different client looks, different output requirements, different lighting situations. One click and the edit is applied.
The mobile app is genuinely useful. I have approved client photos on my phone, made quick adjustments, and sent them out without touching my computer. The mobile editing is not as powerful, but it handles 80% of what I need on the go.
Where It Falls Short
Adobe subscription is expensive. $12/month for Lightroom alone, or $60/month for the full Creative Cloud. Over time, this is a lot of money. I have paid for Lightroom for years. The total cost would buy a lot of software outright.
The AI features feel behind the competition. Lightroom has AI noise reduction and sharpening, but Topaz does it better. Adobe is catching up, slowly, but right now Topaz wins on raw enhancement quality.
Interface can feel overwhelming for beginners. Too many panels, too many options, too much to learn. I have been using Lightroom for over a decade and still discover new features. That is both a strength and a weakness.
ON1: The Alternative
ON1 positions itself as the professional alternative without the subscription.
What Actually Works
No subscription. Pay once, own it. For photographers tired of monthly payments, this is huge. At $129 one-time, you know where you stand. No future bills, no price increases, no subscription anxiety.
The layered editing approach is powerful. If you like Photoshop-style compositing but want something more accessible, ON1 has it. I use this for specific situations where I need to combine multiple photos without full Photoshop complexity.
Effect presets are genuinely good. The photo effects, retouching tools, and looks are usable straight out of the box without heavy customization. The “Sky Swap” feature alone is worth the price for real estate and landscape photographers.
Where It Falls Short
The RAW processing is not as refined as Lightroom. Color accuracy and detail preservation lag behind. For professional work where color accuracy matters, I notice the difference.
Software updates feel infrequent. Adobe ships constant improvements, new features, and bug fixes. ON1 updates are less regular. That can mean living with quirks longer.
The ecosystem is limited. No mobile app, limited cloud integration, no seamless connection to other tools. If you need cross-device workflows, ON1 will frustrate you.
When Each Makes Sense
Use Topaz Labs if:
– You need the best AI enhancement available
– You already have a workflow and just need better upscaling/denoising/sharpening
– You are willing to learn each app separately
– You value results over workflow
Use Lightroom if:
– You want the professional standard workflow
– You use other Adobe products
– Cloud integration and cross-device sync matter to you
– You edit hundreds or thousands of photos regularly
– You need the most refined RAW processing
Use ON1 if:
– You refuse to pay subscriptions
– You want professional features without Adobe complexity
– You prefer one-time purchases
– You do not need cloud integration
– You need layered editing without Photoshop
My Daily Experience
I use all three, depending on what I am doing.
Lightroom is my primary editor. Everything starts there—import, organize, basic edits, export. If it cannot be done in Lightroom, I question whether it needs to be done.
Topaz comes in when Lightroom is not enough. Gigapixel for upscaling. DeNoise for high ISO shots. Sharpen for focus recovery. The standalone workflow is annoying but the results justify it.
ON1 sits on the shelf for specific situations. Sometimes I need layered editing without jumping to Photoshop. Sometimes I need quick effects without building them from scratch. ON1 handles that.
Price Reality
Topaz Labs:
– Individual apps: $79-99 each
– Bundle: $199 (all apps)
– Subscription: $9.99/month for all apps
– The bundle is genuinely good value if you use multiple apps
– The subscription makes sense if you want always-up-to-date tools
Lightroom:
– Photography plan: $12/month (Lightroom + 20GB cloud)
– All Apps: $60/month (full Creative Cloud)
– Annual billing saves roughly 20%
– Over time, this adds up to real money
– The cost is justified by productivity for professional use
ON1:
– Photo RAW: $129 (one-time)
– No subscription required
– Includes all features permanently
– Best long-term value if you hate subscriptions
Head-to-Head Quality
Upscaling a 12MP photo to 48MP:
– Topaz Gigapixel: Best quality, most realistic details
– Lightroom: Acceptable but noticeably softer
– ON1: Good but loses fine details
Noise reduction on ISO 6400 photo:
– Topaz DeNoise: Excellent, cleans without destroying detail
– Lightroom: Good, some detail loss at aggressive settings
– ON1: Decent, but not as refined
Sharpening slightly soft image:
– Topaz Sharpen: Best recovery of usable shots
– Lightroom: Good, has limitations on extreme cases
– ON1: Acceptable, works for mild issues
The Downsides
Topaz: Expensive total cost if you want multiple apps, separate apps create workflow friction, learning curve despite AI marketing
Lightroom: Subscription forever, expensive over time, AI features lag competition, overwhelming for beginners
ON1: RAW processing not as refined, infrequent updates, limited ecosystem, no mobile integration
What Nobody Tells You
AI enhancement is not magic. Topaz makes things better, not perfect. There are limits to what software can recover from bad original captures. You cannot fix a blurry photo into a sharp one. You can only make it less blurry.
Lightroom’s power is in the workflow, not any single feature. The organizing, batching, and integration matter more than any individual tool. If you just need to edit one photo, other tools might be simpler.
ON1 is a better choice for hobbyists than professionals. The one-time price is appealing, but professionals will eventually hit limitations that force them back to Lightroom or Photoshop.
Honest Bottom Line
I recommend Topaz Gigapixel and DeNoise to every photographer I talk to. These are the best AI enhancement tools available, worth the investment for anyone who takes photos seriously.
Lightroom is what I use daily despite the subscription cost. The workflow benefits justify it for professional work. Yes, I pay forever, but the productivity gains make it worth it.
ON1 is good for specific situations but not my primary recommendation. If you absolutely refuse subscriptions, it is a viable option. Just know what you are giving up.
My setup: Lightroom for daily editing, Topaz for enhancement, ON1 for occasional layered work.
Quick take: Topaz wins for AI enhancement quality. Lightroom wins for professional workflow. ON1 wins for no-subscription philosophy.