Natural jawline cleanup
Use the page presets to set the main creative direction before adding smaller custom notes.
Upload a selfie or portrait and remove double chin appearance with AI. Clean up under-chin fullness, tighten the chin-to-neck line, and keep the original person recognizable.

— Splash gallery —
A compact gallery of lower-face cleanup, shown on real portraits and headshots. Each frame keeps the same person, pose, and light while softening the chin-to-neck transition just enough to read cleaner on profiles, resumes, and social crops.
— Chapter 01 —
Double Chin Remover is a respectful face retouch workflow for selfies, headshots, and profile photos where the lower-face area looks heavier than intended because of camera angle, posture, lens compression, or shadow. Instead of judging the person in the photo, it treats the issue as a portrait cleanup problem: reduce the look of a double chin, soften under-chin fullness, clarify the chin-to-neck transition, and add gentle jawline retouch only where it helps the image read cleaner. The goal is a believable edit that preserves the same person, expression, skin texture, lighting, hairstyle, facial hair, makeup, and camera framing.
This double chin remover is not meant to create a new face, erase age, or force every portrait into the same sharp V-shape. It is closer to practical beauty retouch for real-world photos: modest chin slimming when the angle exaggerates fullness, careful under-chin cleanup when shadows feel heavy, and restrained lower-face refinement for profile pictures, resumes, dating images, creator portraits, and social thumbnails. The best result should feel like a more flattering version of the original photo, not a filtered replacement.
— Chapter 02 —
Use the page presets to set the main creative direction before adding smaller custom notes.
Match the uploaded image, preset, and final use case so the result feels intentional rather than over-edited.
Keep identity, safety, and practical output limits in mind when choosing how far to push the effect.
Start with Natural Cleanup when you want a subtle portrait retouch that keeps the same face and expression.
Use Low-Angle Rescue for selfies shot from below, but keep expectations realistic if the chin is hidden by pose or clothing.
Ask for jawline clarity rather than drastic weight loss; the safest result improves shadow and contour without changing identity.
Choose Headshot Polish for business portraits where believable skin texture and neck shadows matter more than a dramatic before-after.
— Occasions —
Fix the camera-angle problem in phone selfies where posture or angle makes the under-chin area look heavier than it does in person.
Polish a dating photo with modest lower-face cleanup so it reads cleaner while still staying believable when someone meets you in real life.
Tighten the chin line in thumbnails, about-page portraits, or talking-head stills where facial clarity matters at small sizes.
— Chapter 04 · How to —
Most edits take about a minute. Start with a selfie, dating photo, headshot, or creator portrait where the lower face is visible, then match the under-chin cleanup strength to the camera angle and intended use.
Use a low-angle selfie, profile picture, headshot, or talking-head frame where the chin, jawline, neck, and mouth area are visible.
Tip: Hands, scarves, high collars, hair, and hard shadow under the jaw can make face retouch look like a shape rewrite instead of subtle under-chin cleanup.
Use Natural Cleanup for everyday selfies, Low-Angle Rescue for upward camera distortion, Headshot Polish for professional photos, and Profile Tighten for side or three-quarter views.
Tip: The lightest option that solves the problem usually looks more believable than aggressive chin slimming or an overly sculpted jawline.
Check the jawline retouch, chin shadow, neck texture, cheeks, smile, and face proportions before using the result in a profile, resume, or dating image.
Tip: If the jaw becomes pinched or over-sharpened, rerun with a gentler cleanup note focused on removing double chin appearance rather than reshaping the whole face.
— What creators say —
“The useful version of this edit is the one that fixes the camera angle problem without making the person look filtered.”
“A good chin cleanup keeps the same face and just makes the headshot feel more polished.”
“Subtle wins here. If the edit looks obvious, it stops being helpful.”
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— Frequently asked —
It reduces the appearance of under-chin fullness in an existing selfie or portrait while keeping the same person, lighting, expression, and texture intact. The edit focuses on under-chin cleanup, chin-to-neck separation, and subtle jawline retouch.
Yes. Selfies are a strong fit, but the prompt options also cover headshots, dating photos, creator portraits, talking-head stills, and profile-facing edits where natural face retouch is useful.
It is designed not to. The prompt asks for modest lower-face cleanup without turning the result into an exaggerated V-shape, heavy beauty retouch, or full face reshaping.
No. A good jawline retouch should read as a cleaner photo, not as a new jaw. If the edit looks pinched, overly sharp, or filtered, rerun with a gentler prompt focused on under-chin cleanup.
Use a clear portrait where the chin, jawline, neck, and mouth area are visible. Heavy blur, deep neck shadow, high collars, hands, or hair covering the chin can make it harder to remove double chin appearance naturally.
Upload one portrait, choose the cleanup style that fits your use case, and generate a more camera-ready result with natural chin slimming, jawline retouch, and the same recognizable person.