Image to Video Tools

Every way to turn a photo into a video with EZ Reels — one generation engine, six ways to get there depending on what you're trying to do.

Core tools

Pet effects

All 8 signature templates, ready inside the Image to Video workbench.

How to pick a tool

Every tool on this page runs the same generation engine underneath — an upload, a template or a free-form prompt, followed by a supported model, duration, and resolution choice. What changes between pages is framing, not capability, so picking the "right" one is really about picking the page whose language matches the question you actually have.

If you just want to try the tool with no preamble, Image to Video is the flagship page — it has all 8 signature pet templates and the full workbench with verified launch settings. If cost is the question on your mind, start with Free Image to Video, which explains exactly how many credits you get, what happens after they run out, and how the watermark works on free renders. If you specifically searched for a zero-cost way to convert a single still photo, Photo to Video AI Free is written around that exact framing.

For a broader "bring this photo to life" use case — not just pets, but people, product shots, or art — Animate Photo covers subtle and dynamic motion without assuming a specific subject. If you're after pet reaction or commentary-style clips specifically, Talking Pet is built around that signature effect cluster. And if you're wondering whether you can type a prompt with no photo at all, Text to Video is honest about what's live today (photo-first generation) and what's rolling out soon (true text-only generation).

None of these pages require a paid plan or an account to try a first video — a new browser receives a one-time 450-credit welcome allowance. The standard welcome render includes a small watermark. Monthly plans add credits for continued use and provide clean outputs for eligible accounts.

Settings shared by every tool

All routes use the same verified launch catalogue. The standard Wan 2.5 render is five seconds at 720p for 450 credits. Its five-second 480p and 1080p alternatives cost 225 and 750 credits, while ten-second Wan 2.5 choices cost 450, 900, or 1,500 credits depending on resolution. Wan 2.6 provides five-second 720p and 1080p choices for 400 and 650 credits. Kling 3.0 Turbo is available at 825 credits for 720p or 1,050 for 1080p.

The page name does not change those costs. “Animate Photo,” “Photo to Video,” and “Talking Pet” are different starting points for the same editor, not separate products with hidden price tables. Each page explains a specific use case, then hands the selected photo and prompt to the same server-owned model catalogue. This keeps the amount shown beside Generate consistent with the amount charged.

For a first attempt, use a clear source photo and the five-second standard setting. Move to 1080p after confirming that the action, face, markings, clothing, or product shape remain stable. Choose ten seconds only when the action genuinely needs more time. A longer clip gives the model more frames to invent, which can also create more opportunities for visual drift.

The one-time 450-credit welcome allowance covers the standard render. It is not a daily refresh and it does not cover every premium configuration. Monthly plans are useful when you need repeated experiments or higher-cost settings; their “videos per month” estimates are based on the 450-credit standard and will be lower when you choose premium or longer renders.

Every tool also follows the same safety and settlement rules. The image and prompt are validated before provider work starts. An accepted job is charged once, a completed job returns one downloadable result, and a provider failure is reconciled through the credit ledger. If the browser closes during a long render, the scheduled sweep continues checking the recorded job instead of creating a second charge. This shared behavior is why choosing a different landing page never creates a different billing system.

Choose the page that answers your question, then make the final decision inside the editor. The editor is the authority for the selected model, duration, resolution, and credits. Landing-page examples explain common choices, but they cannot override an unavailable combination or silently substitute a more expensive setting. That separation keeps educational copy from becoming a hidden pricing rule.

Frequently asked questions

Which tool should I start with?
If you're not sure, start with Image to Video — it's the flagship generator with all 8 signature templates and supported model settings. The other pages exist because different people search for the same idea in different words (free, animate, talking pet, text-to-video) — pick whichever matches how you're thinking about your video.
Do these tools use different AI models?
The pages share the same image-to-video workbench and supported launch catalogue. You can use the standard setting or choose a supported model, duration, and resolution combination; the exact credit cost is shown before generation.
Is there a difference between 'free image to video' and 'photo to video ai free'?
Both are genuinely free to start. Free Image to Video focuses on explaining exactly how the free credit system works; Photo to Video AI Free focuses on the zero-cost, no-friction angle of turning a single photo into a video. Use whichever page answers the question you actually have.
Is text-to-video available yet?
Not yet — true text-to-video (no starting photo) is coming soon. Today, every tool on this page works from an uploaded photo. The Text to Video page explains what's live now and what's on the way.