Honest Comparison

MakeMeBabies vs Baby Face AI: An Honest Comparison

MakeMeBabies has been around since 2006. We launched in 2025 using generative AI. Here's what actually changed — and why it matters.

6 min read·February 17, 2026
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Why Are People Comparing These Two?

MakeMeBabies is one of the most searched baby face tools on the internet. It's been around for nearly 20 years — which in web years is practically ancient. For a generation of internet users, it was the baby face prediction tool. You might have used it as a teenager, laughed at the result, and moved on.

Now that AI image generation has become genuinely impressive, people are naturally asking: is there anything better than MakeMeBabies? Has the technology actually improved? Are there new "AI baby generator" or "babymaker AI" tools worth trying?

The answer is yes — dramatically. This article explains why, shows you exactly what changed, and helps you decide which tool is right for what you're actually trying to do. We'll be honest about both: MakeMeBabies still has its use case, and Baby Face AI costs money. Let's look at the real comparison.

How MakeMeBabies Works (The Old Tech)

MakeMeBabies uses face morphing — a technique from the early 2010s that analyzes facial landmarks and blends pixel color and position between two photos. The algorithm identifies key points (eye corners, nose tip, mouth edges, chin) and calculates a mathematical average between the two faces. Then it blends the pixel colors at those positions.

This approach has no understanding of how genetics actually works, how facial features actually inherit, or what real baby faces actually look like. It's pixel math. It produces a face that exists precisely halfway between two adults — which is nothing like how real children look. Babies have dramatically different facial proportions than adults; a literal average of two adult faces produces an adult-looking blob, not a baby.

To be fair to MakeMeBabies: it does what it was built to do in 2006. The results are often funny, sometimes surprisingly decent, and the whole experience is instant and free. Those are real advantages for a certain type of use case.

MakeMeBabies pros worth acknowledging: completely free; nearly instant results (it's just pixel math); brand recognition that's lasted 20 years; works for a casual, no-commitment experience.

MakeMeBabies cons: the output often looks uncanny and distorted; one result only (no variations); no real AI or genetic modeling; unclear photo retention and privacy policy; heavy ad load throughout the experience; the "baby" often looks like a miniature adult rather than an actual infant.

How Baby Face AI Works (Generative AI)

Baby Face AI uses a modern generative AI model trained on actual parent-child photo datasets. It doesn't blend pixels — it models feature inheritance. The AI analyzes both parent faces in semantic terms (eye shape, nose bridge curvature, jaw structure, skin tone) and generates baby images that plausibly inherit combinations of those features the way real genetics would.

The results are photorealistic portrait-quality images — the kind that look like real photos of real babies, not blurry composites. And because genetic inheritance is probabilistic (any two parents could have several different-looking children), we generate 8 unique variations across 3 developmental age stages: newborn, baby, and toddler.

See our full technical explainer on how AI baby generation works →

Privacy is built in by design: no account required, no email collected, photos deleted within 1 hour. The experience is end-to-end anonymous. You upload two photos, pay €2.99, wait about 60 seconds, and receive 8 photorealistic baby predictions that you can download and share.

MakeMeBabies vs Baby Face AI: Feature by Feature

Let's go through the key dimensions of comparison honestly.

Image Quality

MakeMeBabies produces pixel-blended composites — often blurry at the seams, sometimes uncanny in the face shape, rarely something you'd want to keep or frame. The quality is what you'd expect from decade-old morphing software. It's good for a laugh in a group chat. It's not good for anything you'd actually share as a meaningful result.

Baby Face AI produces photorealistic portrait-quality images. These look like professional baby photos — studio-lit, sharp, with realistic skin textures and the correct proportions of actual infant and toddler faces. These are images you'd genuinely want to download, send to family, or post to Instagram. The quality gap is immediately obvious.

Number of Results

MakeMeBabies gives you one image per prediction. This makes sense for their approach — there's only one "average" face to calculate. But it also means if the result is bad, there's nothing to fall back on.

Baby Face AI generates 8 unique variations. This isn't marketing fluff — it reflects the genuine probabilistic nature of genetic inheritance. Your kids could look different from each other, so a single prediction isn't honest. 8 variations show you the realistic range of what your baby could look like.

Age Stages

MakeMeBabies produces a single "baby" that often looks like a miniaturized adult. This is the face-morphing limitation: it blends two adult faces, producing something that inherits adult facial proportions rather than the genuinely different proportions of a real infant.

Baby Face AI generates across 3 distinct age stages: newborn (0–3 months), baby (6–12 months), and toddler (2–3 years). Each stage uses the correct facial proportions for that developmental phase — larger forehead, rounder cheeks, flatter nose bridge for newborns; more defined features emerging as a toddler. It's the difference between a cartoon of a baby and an actual photo of a baby.

Privacy

MakeMeBabies has a privacy policy, but the details around photo retention and data usage are unclear. The site serves heavy ad loads, which implies ad-tech trackers. If you're uploading real photos of yourself or your partner, unclear data practices should give you pause.

Baby Face AI was designed privacy-first. Photos are processed anonymously (no account, no email), and all uploaded photos are automatically deleted within 1 hour. They're never stored permanently, never sold, never used for training. We built it this way because we'd want it this way.

Price

MakeMeBabies is "free" — but it's free in the way ad-supported content is free. You pay with your attention (and potentially your data). The experience involves ads before results, ads around results, and upsell prompts throughout.

Baby Face AI is €2.99 flat. One payment. No subscription, no recurring charge, no account, no upsells, no ads. You get 8 photorealistic baby predictions across 3 age stages. That's less than a coffee.

Speed

MakeMeBabies is near-instant — face morphing is cheap computation that finishes in under a second. This is a real advantage if you want something immediately without waiting.

Baby Face AI takes 30–60 seconds. Actual AI image generation is compute-intensive. We run 8 parallel generation jobs, which is why it's as fast as it is — but it's not instant. For most users, the 60-second wait for photorealistic results is entirely worth it. It's part of the experience — there's even a cinematic loading sequence that builds anticipation.

Which Should You Actually Use?

Honest answer: it depends on what you're trying to do.

Use MakeMeBabies if: You want something free and instant. You're doing a silly group activity and don't care about quality. You want a laugh with no investment. You've heard of it before and just want the nostalgic experience.

Use Baby Face AI if: You actually want to see what your baby might realistically look like. You're expecting and want something beautiful to share with family. You're newly engaged and curious what your future children might look like. You want 8 variations rather than one. You want results worth posting to Instagram. You care about photo privacy. You want age stages that look like actual infants, not miniature adults.

We cost €2.99. We're not pretending that's the same as free. For a quick joke, MakeMeBabies still works. For genuine curiosity about what your baby could actually look like — the kind of curiosity that makes you spend an evening looking through results and sending them to everyone you know — €2.99 is nothing.

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What the Experience Feels Like

Here's what using Baby Face AI actually looks like from start to finish. You go to babyfacepredictor.com, upload a clear photo of each parent — the interface guides you with drag-and-drop zones and a face detection check. Then you pay €2.99 via Stripe (takes 10 seconds). Then the wait begins.

The 60-second loading sequence is cinematic by design — animated phases, warm messaging, building anticipation. Then the reveal: 8 baby faces appear one by one with a staggered animation. The first image appearing is a genuine "oh my god" moment for most couples. You immediately start looking for whose nose it has, whose eyes, scrolling through the variations asking yourself which one feels most like it could be yours.

You can download any individual image, download all as a zip, or generate a share card — a 1080×1080 formatted image with both parent photos and the best baby prediction, ready for Instagram. The whole experience, from upload to saved photos, takes under 5 minutes. And the results are the kind you come back to look at.

Contrast with MakeMeBabies: you upload two photos, wait a second, get one low-quality composited result. It's funny for the moment. Then it's forgotten.

Making Content Worth Sharing

MakeMeBabies results get shared as jokes. You screenshot it, send it to your group chat, everyone laughs, and the conversation moves on. The content has a shelf life of about 30 seconds.

Baby Face AI results are shared as genuine emotional moments. Expecting parents post them as pregnancy announcements — "the AI thinks our baby will look like this." Engaged couples share them on Instagram stories with "can't wait to meet them 🥹." Friend groups send them around for hours comparing variations. The content has legs because the quality warrants actual engagement.

The share card feature — a beautifully formatted 1080×1080 image combining both parent thumbnails and the best baby prediction — is specifically designed for Instagram-worthy content. It's the kind of post that gets saved, not just liked. The branding is subtle, so it doesn't feel like an ad — it feels like your content.

Want the Full Side-by-Side?

This article focused on the editorial comparison — the "why it matters" story. If you want a detailed feature matrix, technology breakdown, and FAQ, we have a dedicated comparison page: See our full Baby Face AI vs MakeMeBabies comparison page →

See the Difference for Yourself

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