AI Pets

AI tools built around the animals in your life. Turn a photo into a stunning painted portrait of your pet. Identify any dog breed, cat breed, bird, fish, reptile, or insect from a photo. Scan stool photos for health indicators before a vet visit. Recognize unknown animals and footprints in the wild. Everything a pet owner, vet, or wildlife enthusiast needs.

AI Pets

9 tools

Generate1

Turn a photo of your pet into a stunning artistic portrait with AI. Choose from oil painting, watercolor, cinematic photography, fantasy art, and more. Perfect for printing, framing, and gifting — a personalized piece of art that captures your pet's personality in a style that no camera can.

Health2

Use AI to analyze stool photos for potential health flags — an accessible first check before a vet visit. Scan dog stool or cat stool images and get an AI assessment of consistency, color, and any notable indicators. These tools are informational and are not a substitute for professional veterinary diagnosis.

How to get the most from AI pet tools

A few things worth knowing before you use these tools — especially the health and identification features.

The best pet portrait photos are natural, not posed

Candid photos — your dog mid-play, your cat in a window, your rabbit in a patch of light — produce the most expressive and lifelike portraits. Stiff, forward-facing poses often result in less character. Good lighting, preferably natural, makes a bigger difference than camera quality.

Breed identification is probabilistic, not definitive

AI breed identification tools analyze visual characteristics — coat pattern, ear shape, muzzle length, body proportions — to produce the most likely breed match. Mixed-breed animals may return multiple breed candidates. For definitive breed determination, especially for health or registration purposes, a DNA test is the gold standard.

Stool scanners are a screening tool, not a diagnosis

The dog and cat stool scanner tools provide a visual analysis based on color, consistency, and visible characteristics. They can flag potential concerns worth discussing with a vet. They cannot detect internal parasites, pathogens, or systemic conditions. A positive AI flag is a reason to call your vet — not a diagnosis.

Snake and spider identification can be safety-critical

When using the reptile, snake, or spider identifier tools after an unexpected encounter, always err on the side of caution while waiting for identification results. If you've been bitten by an unknown snake or spider, seek medical attention immediately — do not wait for AI identification.

Frequently asked questions

What photo should I use for the best pet portrait?

Use a well-lit photo where your pet's face is clearly visible and in focus. Natural light near a window works better than flash. A photo where your pet is relaxed and showing their personality — ears up, natural expression — produces a more characterful portrait than a forced pose.

How accurate is the dog and cat breed identifier?

For purebred or predominantly single-breed dogs and cats, accuracy is very high — typically identifying the correct breed from a clear photo. For mixed breeds, the tool returns the most likely breed combinations based on visible characteristics. Accuracy decreases with heavily mixed or rare breeds.

Can I identify a wild animal I photographed in nature?

Yes. The Animal Identifier tool handles wild animals including deer, foxes, raccoons, bears, and more. Upload a photo from a trail camera, phone, or binoculars shot and it will identify the species and provide context about the animal.

Is the stool scanner safe to use as a health check?

The stool scanner is a supplementary screening tool for pet owners. It can help you decide whether a symptom warrants a vet visit. It is not a medical device, does not replace physical examination, and cannot detect parasites or pathogens. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for health concerns.

Can the animal footprint identifier work from snow, mud, or dirt photos?

Yes. The footprint identifier is trained on tracks in various surfaces — mud, snow, sand, and soil. A clear, overhead photo of the print produces the best result. Partially obscured, overlapping, or degraded prints may produce less certain identifications.