Share the issue, not the private data
Support screenshots, bug reports, app reviews, tutorials, and dashboard captures often need context. Blur the name, email, address, token, order ID, or internal label without covering the whole screen.
Private browser-based image editing
Most screenshot mistakes are boring until they are public: an email in the sidebar, a customer name in a chat, an order number in a receipt, or an API key in a browser tab. Use this page to hide the text that should not travel with the image while leaving the useful context readable.

Upload your images, adjust blur strength, preview in real time and download the blurred image.
Support screenshots, bug reports, app reviews, tutorials, and dashboard captures often need context. Blur the name, email, address, token, order ID, or internal label without covering the whole screen.
People usually blur the main line and forget the browser tabs, bookmarks bar, notification previews, side navigation, timestamps, profile avatars, file names, and footer details. Check the full image once before exporting.
Short words, numbers, and codes are easier to guess than long paragraphs. If you are hiding phone numbers, IDs, tracking numbers, API keys, or account data, use a stronger blur and cover the whole line with padding.
From real editing jobs
You are sending a bug report and the screenshot includes customer data.
You are writing a tutorial and a real account name appears in the interface.
You want to post a receipt, label, chat, or dashboard without leaking private text.
How it works
The workflow is intentionally simple: choose the image, blur the private area, inspect the preview, and download a safer copy.
Upload the screenshot or photo that contains text.
Brush over every private text area, including sidebars and headers.
Increase blur until letters, numbers, and codes are not readable.
Download the edited screenshot and use it for sharing or documentation.
Names, emails, phone numbers, addresses, order IDs, tracking numbers, API keys, account balances, internal project names, and private chat details are common examples.
Yes, if the blur is too light or the covered area is too narrow. Short numbers and codes need stronger blur than normal text.
For passwords, API keys, recovery codes, financial records, or legal documents, full coverage or very strong blur is safer than a light blur.
Open the blur editor, hide the details you do not want to share, and download the finished image in a few clicks.
Blur text in an image