Adobe has snapped up Topaz Labs, the Dallas-based outfit that turned AI image and video enhancement into something of an art form. The deal, announced on June 25, 2026, hands Adobe one of the most respected toolkits in the business — and a clear signal that it intends to dominate the increasingly crowded field of AI-assisted creativity.
If you’ve spent any time wrangling low-resolution footage or grainy archival stills, you already know the names. Topaz has been at this for over two decades, and its flagship apps — the Gigapixel upscaler and Topaz Photo enhancer — have earned cult status among photographers and video professionals. The company’s stock-in-trade is the unglamorous but vital work of upscaling, denoising, and sharpening, the kind of fixes that quietly save a shoot.
What makes Topaz genuinely interesting on a technical level is Neurostream, the technology that lets large AI models run locally on consumer hardware rather than shunting everything off to the cloud. For anyone who cares about speed, privacy, or simply not paying for compute time, that’s a meaningful distinction — and a useful counterweight to the cloud-first trend.
Adobe isn’t starting from scratch here. Some of Topaz’s tools already appear inside Creative Cloud, but the plan now is full integration. Expect Topaz’s enhancement models to be woven across Photoshop, Lightroom, and the Firefly generative image engine, alongside Firefly Services. The pitch is straightforward: restore and remaster old content, enhance footage, and blend AI-generated and traditionally captured material into a single seamless production.
This is also a competitive play. Adobe is squaring up against rivals like Canva and DaVinci Resolve, and bolting on a proven, professional-grade enhancement suite is a quick way to raise the floor on output quality across its apps.
The credentials are real, too. Last year Topaz Labs took home an Emmy for AI Image/Video Enhancement — specifically for high-quality TV catalog restoration — as part of the 76th Annual Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards. That’s the sort of award that lands on the trophy shelf precisely because the work is invisible when it’s done well.
For existing Topaz users, the immediate news is reassuring. Adobe says the company’s tools will remain available as standalone products on the Topaz Labs website, and CEO Eric Yang will keep leading the team. “With Topaz Labs we will give every creator the quality and control to easily produce that content at higher quality and resolution,” said David Wadhwani, President of Adobe’s Creativity & Productivity Business.
The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2026, pending regulatory approval. Whether the eventual integration feels seamless or like another subscription tier is the question creators will be watching closely.