2026/06/05

Amazon Product Image Prompts: 10 GPT Image 2 Templates

Copy Amazon product image prompts for main images, gallery shots, lifestyle scenes, infographics, comparison visuals, and fix passes with GPT Image 2.

Amazon Product Image Prompts: 10 GPT Image 2 Templates

The best Amazon product image prompts are not just product photography prompts. They tell GPT Image 2 which listing image you need, what product details must stay exact, which marketplace rules to respect, and what visual job the image performs: main image, secondary gallery shot, lifestyle scene, infographic, comparison, or ad creative.

Use the templates below with a real product reference whenever SKU accuracy matters. You can browse more examples in the GPT Image 2 prompt library, then run and compare variations in the GPT Image 2 workspace.

Quick answer

For Amazon-style images, write prompts around the image role first. A main image needs a white background and strict product preservation. A secondary image can show use, scale, benefits, ingredients, dimensions, or comparison. A creative ad image can be more dramatic, but it should not invent claims, badges, reviews, or packaging details.

Base formula:

Create a [Amazon listing image role] for the uploaded [product].
Preserve the exact product shape, dimensions, color, material, label text, logo placement, packaging details, and proportions.
Use [background, lighting, camera angle, crop, and composition] suitable for [main image, gallery image, lifestyle image, infographic, or ad creative].
Make the product clear, realistic, and easy to understand at marketplace thumbnail size.
Do not add fake claims, badges, ratings, watermarks, extra products, distorted text, changed labels, inaccurate packaging, or clutter.

What to specify before prompting

Prompt decisionWhat to writeWhy it matters for Amazon images
Image roleMain image, gallery angle, lifestyle, scale, infographic, comparison, ad variantDifferent image roles need different risk levels
Product truthShape, label, logo, material, dimensions, color, included accessoriesPrevents a beautiful image from becoming an inaccurate listing asset
BackgroundPure white, neutral studio, kitchen counter, bathroom shelf, outdoor use sceneControls whether the image feels compliant, informative, or promotional
CompositionCentered packshot, three-quarter angle, top-down, split-screen, macro detailHelps shoppers understand the product quickly
Text rulesNo text, exact headline, short callouts only, no claimsReduces unreadable text and unsupported selling claims
Negative rulesNo badges, reviews, extra products, distorted logo, fake certificationsBlocks common marketplace-image failures

The practical workflow is simple: keep the product-truth line stable, then change only the image role. That gives you a consistent listing set instead of ten unrelated images.

10 copyable Amazon product image prompts

Replace the bracketed parts with your product details. If the product already exists, upload the reference first and make the reference the source of truth.

1. Amazon main image on white

Use this for the first listing image when product accuracy matters more than mood.

Create an Amazon-style main product image from the uploaded product reference.
Preserve the exact product shape, dimensions, color, material, label text, logo placement, packaging details, and proportions.
Place the product centered on a pure white background with realistic soft studio lighting and a subtle natural contact shadow.
Show the entire product clearly, front-facing or at a slight three-quarter angle, with no cropping and no dramatic perspective distortion.
Do not add props, people, hands, badges, sale text, rating graphics, watermarks, extra accessories, additional products, or decorative background elements.

Best for: primary marketplace image, catalog thumbnail, conservative SKU display.

2. Secondary lifestyle image

Use this when the main image is accurate but shoppers still need to see the product in context.

Create a secondary Amazon listing lifestyle image for the uploaded product.
Preserve the exact product shape, color, label, logo, packaging details, material finish, and proportions.
Place the product in a believable [use environment] with soft natural light and 2 to 4 supporting props that match the category.
Keep the product as the clear hero subject and make it readable at marketplace gallery size.
The scene should show how the product is used, stored, opened, held, or displayed.
Do not change the packaging, add fake claims, add unrelated products, cover the label, or make the scene look like fantasy CGI.
GPT Image 2 ecommerce skincare product page mockup example

A GPT Image 2 prompt-library example for product page context. It fits secondary Amazon gallery prompts because the product remains central while the surrounding layout explains category, finish, and brand feel.

3. Feature callout image

Use this for a secondary image that explains benefits without making unsupported claims.

Create an Amazon listing feature callout image for the uploaded product.
Preserve the exact product shape, label, logo, color, material, and packaging details.
Show the product large and clear on a clean neutral background.
Add exactly [3 to 5] short feature callouts with thin leader lines pointing to real visible product details.
Use readable modern typography and keep the callouts factual: [feature 1], [feature 2], [feature 3].
Do not add medical claims, guarantees, fake certifications, review stars, sale badges, inaccurate dimensions, or text that is not requested.

Best for: material callouts, included parts, interface details, pack contents, practical buyer questions.

4. Dimension and scale image

Use this when shoppers need size confidence before buying.

Create a clean Amazon secondary image showing product dimensions and real-world scale for the uploaded product.
Preserve the exact product shape, proportions, label, color, material, and visible details.
Place the product on a neutral studio background with clear spacing around it.
Add simple dimension lines for [height], [width], and [depth] using the exact measurements provided: [measurements].
Optionally include one realistic scale reference: [hand, shelf, countertop, bag, desk], without covering important product details.
Do not invent measurements, distort the product, add extra accessories, or make the scale reference larger than the product.

Best for: organizers, bottles, bags, tools, home goods, pet products, electronics accessories.

5. Bundle or what-is-in-the-box image

Use this for kits, multipacks, and listings where confusion about included items creates returns.

Create an Amazon "what is included" gallery image for the uploaded product set.
Preserve the exact identity, label, color, shape, material, and proportions of every included item.
Arrange all included items in a clean grid or balanced studio layout on a light neutral background.
Add short labels only for the included items: [item list].
Make quantities clear and easy to count.
Do not add items that are not included, change packaging, invent accessories, add review badges, or create unreadable text.

Best for: starter kits, multipacks, bundles, replacement parts, accessories.

6. Conversion ad or comparison image

Use this for a secondary image that needs stronger visual energy than a main image.

Create a high-impact Amazon secondary promotional image for the uploaded product.
Preserve the product identity, shape, label, logo placement, material finish, color, and proportions.
Use a realistic commercial studio composition with strong directional lighting, clean contrast, and enough negative space for one short headline.
Add the headline exactly: "[SHORT FACTUAL HEADLINE]".
The image should feel premium and conversion-focused while keeping the product accurate.
Do not invent claims, certifications, awards, discounts, review stars, extra products, or distorted packaging details.
GPT Image 2 cinematic ecommerce snack ad example

A cinematic ecommerce ad example from the GPT Image 2 prompt library. It belongs with promotional secondary images because the lighting and composition are stronger than a main image, but the product is still the visual anchor.

7. Ingredient, material, or texture detail

Use this when quality is visible in the surface, formula, fabric, stitching, or finish.

Create an Amazon gallery detail image focused on the [ingredient, material, texture, stitching, grain, finish, or mechanism] of the uploaded product.
Preserve the real product material, color, label, construction, and category context.
Use realistic macro product photography with controlled highlights, sharp focus on the important detail, and shallow depth of field.
The image should help shoppers understand quality and tactile feel.
Do not invent new materials, change the product finish, add decorative text, fake certifications, or misleading before-and-after effects.

Best for: beauty, apparel, leather goods, food packaging, tools, home products, electronics materials.

8. Apparel fit or use-case split screen

Use this for wearable products or products where shoppers compare use situations.

Create a split-screen Amazon secondary image for the uploaded [product category].
Preserve the exact product design, color, material, logo placement, proportions, and visible details.
Show two realistic use cases side by side: [use case A] and [use case B].
Keep the product readable in both panels and use consistent commercial lighting.
Add only short factual panel labels if needed: "[LABEL A]" and "[LABEL B]".
Do not change the product design, invent performance claims, add unrelated accessories, or make the layout cluttered.
GPT Image 2 split-screen athleisure ecommerce ad example

A split-screen ecommerce example from the prompt library. It matches apparel and use-case prompts because the layout lets shoppers compare contexts without losing the product.

9. Amazon storefront hero image

Use this for brand-store modules, not the strict main image slot.

Create an Amazon storefront hero banner for the uploaded product or product line.
Preserve the exact product identity, packaging, label, logo placement, colors, materials, and proportions.
Arrange the product as the hero subject in a clean commercial scene with [brand environment] and realistic lighting.
Leave negative space on the [left/right/center] for storefront copy.
Use a premium ecommerce photography style that feels polished but not overdecorated.
Do not add fake claims, ratings, discount badges, extra products, distorted labels, or unreadable decorative text.

Best for: brand stores, A+ modules, category banners, campaign pages.

10. Fix pass for an almost-good Amazon image

Use this when the composition works but one detail makes the asset risky.

Edit the generated Amazon product image while preserving the overall composition, crop, background, lighting, and product position.
Fix only these issues: [distorted logo, changed label, wrong color, extra prop, inaccurate shape, unreadable text, bad shadow, cropped product].
Use the uploaded product reference as the source of truth for shape, label placement, color, material, proportions, and packaging details.
Do not redesign the scene, add new objects, change the camera angle, invent claims, or alter details that are already correct.

Best for: label cleanup, color correction, shadow correction, removing accidental props, restoring package accuracy.

Amazon-specific prompt rules

The most useful prompt is often the least dramatic one. Add more detail only when the image role needs it.

If you are making...Keep it strictAvoid
Main imageProduct centered, white background, no props, full product visibleLifestyle scenes, badges, text, extra accessories
Secondary gallery imageOne visual message per imageTrying to explain every feature in one frame
Lifestyle imageRealistic setting and product visibilityProps that hide the SKU or imply extra included items
InfographicShort factual labels and exact detailsUnsupported claims, fake certifications, tiny text
Ad creativeStrong composition with accurate product truthInvented awards, fake reviews, altered packaging

If you are unsure, create the conservative image first. Then make a separate secondary image with lifestyle, callout, or ad logic.

A GPTIMG2 workflow for a full listing set

  1. Open the GPT Image 2 workspace and upload the product reference.
  2. Generate the white-background main image first.
  3. Keep the product-truth sentence fixed across every prompt.
  4. Create one secondary image for use context, one for scale, one for features, and one for texture or detail.
  5. Run a fix pass on any image where the product changed.
  6. Compare all images as a set before using them in a listing.

That order prevents the common problem where each image looks good alone but the listing feels inconsistent.

QA checklist before using an AI product image

Before sending an Amazon-style image to a listing workflow, check these points:

  • Does the product shape match the reference?
  • Is the label or logo changed?
  • Did the model add props that imply extra included items?
  • Is any text unreadable, exaggerated, or unsupported?
  • Are dimensions, quantities, and comparison labels accurate?
  • Does the main image stay product-first and uncluttered?
  • Do secondary images each explain one buyer question?

GPT Image 2 can help you move fast, but product accuracy still needs human review. Treat every generated listing image as a draft until the SKU, claims, dimensions, and included items are checked.

FAQ

Can I use prompt-only generation for Amazon product images?

Use prompt-only generation for concepts, mood boards, fictional products, or campaign direction. For a real SKU, upload a product reference and tell GPT Image 2 to preserve exact shape, label, color, material, logo placement, and proportions.

What is the best prompt for an Amazon main image?

The best main-image prompt is conservative: product centered on pure white, full product visible, realistic light, exact product preservation, no props, no badges, no text, and no extra products.

How many prompts do I need for one listing?

Usually five image roles are enough to start: main image, lifestyle use image, feature callout, size or scale image, and detail or material image. Add comparison or ad creative only when it answers a real buyer question.

Should Amazon product image prompts include text?

For main images, avoid text. For secondary images, use short factual labels only when they help explain the product. Keep claims verifiable and avoid fake certifications, review stars, guarantees, or unsupported performance language.

Final takeaway

Strong Amazon product image prompts start with listing intent, not style adjectives. Define the role of the image, preserve the product truth, set the background and composition, and block the failure modes that create inaccurate marketplace assets.

Use the GPT Image 2 prompt library for examples, then build the listing set in the GPT Image 2 workspace one image role at a time.