TL;DR / Key Takeaways
- AI baby generators are fun — but can they really predict your future child?
- Here's the honest answer on accuracy, how they actually work, and what to watch for.
"What will our baby look like?" is one of the most-searched questions for couples — and AI baby generators promise an answer. So how accurate are they, really? Short version: they're a fun blend, not a prediction. Here's the honest breakdown.
How they actually work
An AI baby generator takes two faces and imagines a baby that combines their features — skin tone, eye color, hair, face shape. It's an image blend guided by what babies tend to look like, not a simulation of genetics. Real inheritance is a roll of the dice across thousands of genes (two brown-eyed parents can have a blue-eyed child); no photo tool can model that.
What makes a good result
- 1Clear, front-facing photos of both parents — good light, no sunglasses.
- 2A tool that respects both faces — the best ones blend skin tone and features faithfully instead of defaulting to a generic baby.
- 3The ability to regenerate — try a few; the 'average' across a couple of runs is the most representative.
A fun, private way to try it
Stork's AI Baby Generator blends your two photos into a cute baby in about a minute. Preview free (watermarked), then $5.99 once if you want to keep it — no subscription. Both people must be adults, it's entertainment-only, and your photos are deleted after the image is made.
Try it for fun: See your baby on Stork →
