Nano Banana Pro Image Editor
Google's state-of-the-art image editing. Premium.
Edit: "replace the background with a vibrant sunset beach with palm trees and golden hour lighting"
About Nano Banana Pro
Nano Banana Pro is Google's premium tier — currently their state-of-the-art editing model. It uses a larger architecture than v1/v2 and is tuned specifically for cases where Google's enterprise customers complained about v2 (very fine details, multi-person scenes, brand-consistent batch outputs). It's the most expensive Google option but the only one that competes with Flux 2 Max on the high end.
Heads up
It's the most expensive Google option. Not worth it for moodboard or test images — use cheaper Nano Banana tiers for exploration.
Best use cases for Nano Banana Pro
Where this model produces meaningfully better output than alternatives.
Multi-person scenes
Editing groups of 3-6 people without face merging or identity drift.
Ultra-fine detail rendering
Jewelry, fabric weave, hair strands, water droplets — the details that downgrade most models.
Brand-consistent batch generation
Producing 50 outputs that all share precise visual language for a campaign.
Top-tier portrait retouching
When skin texture, eye color, and subtle lighting all need to look real, not "AI smoothed".
Final-output work
When the image is going to a paying client or print, not your moodboard.
Tips for great results with Nano Banana Pro
Practical tricks based on how this specific model was trained.
1. Use for final, not exploration
Why: Pro costs noticeably more than v1. Make sure you know exactly what you want before running it.
2. Pass detailed reference images
Why: Pro has the largest "attention budget" for references — feed it generously.
3. Use for retouching, not invention
Why: Pro's polish layer is its differentiator. Use it where polish matters.
Interior editing example
Same model, different task — adding a new element to an existing scene.
Edit: "add a tall floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace with a roaring warm fire to the wall behind the sofa"
How Nano Banana Pro compares
Quick comparison against the closest alternatives.
| Model | Maker | Tier | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nano Banana Pro | Premium | Multi-person scenes | |
| Nano Banana 2 | Standard | Production-grade compositing | |
| Flux 2 Max | Black Forest Labs | Premium | Editorial and magazine spreads |
| ChatGPT Image 2 | OpenAI | Premium | High-resolution final outputs (up to 4K) |
Try Nano Banana Pro on your own image
Upload any photo, describe what to change, and Nano Banana Pro handles the rest.
Open editor →FAQ
What is Nano Banana Pro and who made it?
Nano Banana Pro was built by Google, released in 2025. Nano Banana Pro is Google's premium tier — currently their state-of-the-art editing model. It uses a larger architecture than v1/v2 and is tuned specifically for cases where Google's enterprise customers complained about v2 (very fine details, multi-person scenes, brand-consistent batch outputs). It's the most expensive Google option but the only one that competes with Flux 2 Max on the high end.
How does pricing work on renza?
Pay-as-you-go credits — no subscription, no monthly minimums. Credits never expire. New accounts get free credits to try things out. Each model has its own credit cost based on what it costs us to run; check the editor for current pricing on this model.
What kind of edits does Nano Banana Pro handle well?
Editing groups of 3-6 people without face merging or identity drift. Jewelry, fabric weave, hair strands, water droplets — the details that downgrade most models. Producing 50 outputs that all share precise visual language for a campaign. Limitation: It's the most expensive Google option. Not worth it for moodboard or test images — use cheaper Nano Banana tiers for exploration.
How does Nano Banana Pro compare to other editors?
Nano Banana Pro is most often compared to Nano Banana 2, Flux 2 Max, ChatGPT Image 2. The right pick depends on your specific use case — see "Best use cases" above for guidance, or open the editor and try them side by side on your own image.
Can I use the output commercially?
Yes. Generations made on renza are yours to use commercially. Standard FAL terms apply to the underlying models — none of the editors in this list restrict commercial use.
Is there a free trial?
Yes — new accounts get free credits at signup, enough to try a few different models. No credit card required.