ToolsRanks

Best Stock Sites for YouTubers (2026)

Quick answer: Our top pick is iStock, followed by Dreamstime and Envato Elements. Entry prices start near $14/mo. All 5 are compared below on price, strengths and the key trade-off of each, so you can match one to your needs.

The shortlist below is ordered for real-world value, not marketing budget. This guide rounds up the 5 tools we'd actually recommend for YouTubers, with what each does best, what it costs, and who should pick it.

We looked at where each tool genuinely earns its keep for this use case, what the entry tier really costs, and who walks away happy. Pricing reflects public plans at the time of writing.

The shortlist at a glance

ToolPricingBest for
iStockCredit packs from ~$12/credit (cheaper in bulk); Essentials/Signature subscriptions billed monthly or annuallyvalue-stock-photos
DreamstimeOn-demand credits and subscriptions; large free image sectionmicrostock-budget
Envato ElementsFrom ~$16.50/mo billed yearly (~$198/yr) individual unlimited; higher Teams tiers per seatall-in-one-library
ShutterstockImage subscriptions from ~$29/mo (10 images/mo) up to flexible plans; credit packs and footage priced separatelylarge-catalog
Adobe StockFrom ~$29.99/mo for 10 assets; annual and on-demand credit packs availablecreative-cloud-users

The picks, ranked

1. iStock Stock Marketplace

Getty-owned mid-tier library offering exclusive Signature collection content at credit and subscription prices well below Getty's enterprise rates. Picked here for how cleanly it handles value-stock-photos.

Why it's on this list: Getty-quality exclusive Signature content at credit prices a fraction of Getty's enterprise rates. Made for value-conscious buyers who want premium, partly-exclusive imagery without Getty's enterprise pricing.

Standout features:

Standout strength: Flexible choice of credits or subscription.

Worth knowing: Owned by Getty Images; Signature collection is exclusive to iStock.

Pricing: Credit packs from ~$12/credit (cheaper in bulk); Essentials/Signature subscriptions billed monthly or annually

Best for:

Full iStock overview

See iStock plans →

2. Dreamstime Stock Marketplace

Long-running affordable microstock with a large free section and a referral model that pays on both buyers and contributors for three years. It stands out for microstock-budget without a heavy setup cost.

Why it's on this list: Affordable microstock whose royalty-free license uniquely allows unlimited printed copies. A natural fit for budget buyers and affiliates wanting cheap stock plus long-tail 3-year referral commissions.

Standout features:

Standout strength: Very low per-asset cost.

Worth knowing: Referral ~10% gross, guaranteed 3 years, 30-day cookie, $100 min payout.

Pricing: On-demand credits and subscriptions; large free image section

Best for:

Full Dreamstime overview

See Dreamstime plans →

3. Envato Elements Stock Subscription Bundle

Single flat subscription gives unlimited downloads across stock video, photos, music, graphics, fonts and templates (Premiere/After Effects, Canva, WordPress), making it the broadest all-in-one creative library. Best suited to teams that care most about all-in-one-library.

Why it's on this list: The widest single-subscription creative bundle, spanning video, audio, graphics and templates in one library. Built for video editors, agencies and content creators who want one unlimited library covering footage, music and editable templates.

Standout features:

Standout strength: Broadest all-in-one creative library for one flat fee.

Worth knowing: Unlimited downloads on every individual plan, subject to a fair-use policy.

Pricing: From ~$16.50/mo billed yearly (~$198/yr) individual unlimited; higher Teams tiers per seat

Best for:

Full Envato Elements overview

See Envato Elements plans →

4. Shutterstock Stock Marketplace

One of the largest royalty-free catalogs covering photos, vectors, footage, music and editorial, with flexible credit packs and subscriptions for any team size. Picked here for how cleanly it handles large-catalog.

Why it's on this list: The world's largest royalty-free marketplace, with 860M+ assets across every media type. Built for agencies and businesses needing a deep, legally safe catalog across photos, video, music and editorial.

Standout features:

Standout strength: Strong legal indemnification on every standard license.

Worth knowing: Enhanced license raises indemnification to $250,000.

Pricing: Image subscriptions from ~$29/mo (10 images/mo) up to flexible plans; credit packs and footage priced separately

Best for:

Full Shutterstock overview

See Shutterstock plans →

5. Adobe Stock Stock Marketplace

Deepest native integration with Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere and the rest of Creative Cloud, letting users license and edit assets without leaving Adobe apps. Picked here for how cleanly it handles creative-cloud-users.

Why it's on this list: Unmatched native integration with Creative Cloud, letting users license assets without leaving their Adobe app. Made for designers and editors already working in Photoshop, Illustrator or Premiere who want in-app licensing.

Standout features:

Standout strength: License assets without leaving the editing app.

Worth knowing: Library advertised around 900M+ assets (includes broader Adobe inventory).

Pricing: From ~$29.99/mo for 10 assets; annual and on-demand credit packs available

Best for:

Full Adobe Stock overview

See Adobe Stock plans →

How to choose

Work backwards from the one job you most need done. Match it to the entry whose ‘why it's on this list’ lines up, sanity-check the pricing against your budget, then shortlist two and trial them on the same real task. Whichever clears your workflow with the least friction is your pick.

FAQ

What is the best option in this list?

For most people, iStock is the strongest all-round pick in this guide, but the right choice depends on your budget and exact workflow.

Are there free options?

These are mostly paid tools; most offer a trial or money-back window, so check each entry's pricing line above before you buy.

How were these tools chosen?

Each pick is judged on fit for the specific job in this guide — its real strengths, pricing and who it suits — using features and facts drawn from independent reviews and the vendors' own documentation, cited in Sources below.

How often is this guide updated?

We revisit pricing and rankings regularly as vendors change plans and ship features.

Sources

The features, strengths and facts cited for each pick above are drawn from these independent reviews and vendor pages: