AI car photography for intake day.
Upload lot photos, choose a scene, set the listing crop, and render a clean set for marketplace pages.


From phone shots to a listing set.
Dealership intake is messy: crowded lots, mixed light, and cars that need to go live the same day. LotReady moves the scene, crop, and export work into one flow while keeping visible vehicle details intact. Shadow and lighting are grounded against the chosen scene, so the finished set reads as shot there.
What the workflow covers
Phone photos are enough
Use the files already taken on the lot. Smart upscaling included — low-res / compressed photos automatically restored, every plan.
Listing formats built in
Choose marketplace ratios and 1K, 2K, or 4K output before you render. At 2K and above, AI Enhance adds a deeper restoration pass for one extra credit.
Batches stay together
Run up to ten photos per job and download the finished set from Gallery.
Questions from intake day
Pricing is public and self-serve, so you can sign up and start rendering without a sales call. Plans are monthly subscriptions that include credits and run from $9 to $79 a month. When a busy week needs more, you can buy one-time credit packs on top of your plan.
There's no overnight queue: every job renders as soon as you press generate. Upload up to 10 photos at a time and they process in parallel, landing in the gallery to download as each one finishes.
You can upload up to 10 photos in a single batch, and the app accepts JPEG, PNG, WebP, and HEIC files. Each file can be as large as 10 MB, which covers a full-resolution phone photo with room to spare, so you rarely need to resize or convert anything before uploading.
You choose from showroom, studio, and outdoor scenes in the built-in library, and every car is placed into whichever one you pick. The scene is chosen before you render, alongside the aspect ratio and resolution, so the whole look of the listing is settled before a credit is spent.
Most standard lot photos come out fine, but not every shot is salvageable. Severe blur, heavy crops that cut off part of the car, or extreme low light can produce a result that is not worth listing. Those are the cases where the source photo simply does not carry enough detail to work with.
Credits are returned for any finished image you cannot use, and that policy applies on every plan. Because renders are paid for in credits, a returned credit goes straight back into your balance for another photo, so a poor outcome does not cost you a listing.
Run your next intake set.
Request access and test LotReady with the photos your team already takes.

