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Best Bulk Image Downloader Chrome Extensions 2026

A detailed, honest comparison of the most popular batch image download extensions for Chrome. We tested each one on real websites to help you find the right tool for saving images in bulk.

Updated February 2026 10 min read

Downloading images one by one from a web page is tedious work. Whether you are a designer collecting reference images, a researcher archiving visual content, a social media manager gathering assets, or a developer downloading sprites and icons, a bulk image downloader extension can save hours of manual right-click-save-as repetition.

We installed and tested six popular bulk image downloader extensions over two weeks, running them against a variety of real websites including image galleries, e-commerce product pages, social media feeds, and photography portfolios. Here is how they compare.

Quick Overview: The Contenders

Each extension takes a different approach to detecting and downloading images. Some scan only visible images in the DOM, while others dig into CSS backgrounds, lazy-loaded sources, and linked media. Here is a snapshot of the six we tested.

Bulk Image Downloader

by Peak Productivity

Free with optional Pro tier

Image Downloader

by vdsHelper

Free

Fatkun Batch Download Image

by Fatkun

Free with Pro at $9.99/yr

Download All Images

by pactinteractive

Free

Imageye - Image Downloader

by Nickyunrui

Free

Save All Images

by peterwooster

Free

Feature Comparison Table

The table below compares the most important features for bulk image downloading. A green check means full support, a red cross means the feature is missing, and text labels indicate partial or conditional availability.

Feature Bulk Image Downloader Image Downloader Fatkun Download All Images Imageye Save All Images
Filter by image size check_circle check_circle check_circle check_circle check_circle check_circle
Filter by file type check_circle check_circle check_circle cancel check_circle cancel
Image preview gallery check_circle check_circle check_circle cancel check_circle cancel
Custom subfolder naming check_circle cancel check_circle cancel cancel cancel
Custom filename patterns check_circle cancel Pro cancel cancel cancel
Detect CSS background images check_circle cancel check_circle cancel check_circle cancel
URL pattern / regex filter check_circle check_circle cancel cancel cancel cancel
One-click download all check_circle check_circle check_circle check_circle check_circle check_circle
Multi-language support check_circle cancel check_circle cancel cancel cancel
Price Free Free Free Free Free Free

Detailed Reviews

1. Bulk Image Downloader (Peak Productivity)

Our own extension was designed from the ground up for serious image downloading workflows. When you click the toolbar icon, a full-page gallery view opens showing every image detected on the current page, organized in a responsive grid with thumbnails. You can filter by minimum width and height, file type (JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP, SVG), and URL pattern using plain text or regular expressions.

What distinguishes it from most competitors is the depth of its filtering and organization features. Custom subfolder naming lets you specify a folder name for each download batch, keeping your Downloads folder organized. Custom filename patterns let you rename files using variables like the page title, image index, and original filename. The extension also detects CSS background images and lazy-loaded sources that many simpler tools miss entirely.

The gallery interface includes select-all, deselect-all, and individual checkboxes for each image, along with dimension and file size information displayed below each thumbnail. Downloading is fast -- images are fetched in parallel and saved to the folder you specify. The free tier covers all core features, while the Pro tier adds batch downloading across multiple tabs and automatic duplicate detection.

Pros

  • addFull-page gallery with visual preview
  • addAdvanced filters: size, type, URL pattern/regex
  • addCustom subfolder and filename patterns
  • addDetects CSS backgrounds and lazy-loaded images
  • add50+ languages, parallel downloads

Cons

  • removeGallery page takes a moment to load on image-heavy sites
  • removeMulti-tab batch download requires Pro
  • removeNo built-in image format conversion

2. Image Downloader (vdsHelper)

Image Downloader is one of the oldest and most recognized image download extensions on the Chrome Web Store. It opens a popup that lists all images found on the page with thumbnails, dimensions, and a download button next to each. You can filter images by URL pattern (including regex) and by minimum width and height.

Its strength is straightforward reliability. It does what it says: finds images and lets you download them. The URL filter is useful for isolating images from specific CDN domains or paths. However, it does not detect CSS background images, does not offer custom subfolder organization, and the popup-based interface can feel cramped on pages with many images. There is no file type filter, though the URL regex partially compensates for this. The extension has not received major feature updates recently, but the core functionality remains stable.

Pros

  • addLong-established with a large user base
  • addURL pattern/regex filtering
  • addShows dimensions for each image
  • addCompletely free, no upsells

Cons

  • removeDoes not detect CSS background images
  • removeNo custom subfolder or filename options
  • removePopup interface cramped on busy pages
  • removeNo file type filter (only URL-based)

3. Fatkun Batch Download Image

Fatkun is a feature-rich batch image downloader that opens a dedicated tab showing all detected images in a grid layout. It supports filtering by size and file type, and it can detect CSS background images, giving it an edge over simpler alternatives. The interface includes a slider for adjusting the thumbnail preview size and checkboxes for selecting which images to download.

Fatkun also offers a "tab capture" mode that downloads images from multiple open tabs simultaneously, which is useful for multi-page galleries. Custom subfolder naming is available in the free tier. The Pro version ($9.99/year) adds custom filename patterns and removes download limits on certain sites. On the downside, it does not support URL pattern filtering, and some users have reported that the extension occasionally shows promotional banners. The interface, while functional, can feel busy with many controls competing for attention.

Pros

  • addDetects CSS background images
  • addMulti-tab batch downloading
  • addCustom subfolder naming (free)
  • addMulti-language support

Cons

  • removeNo URL pattern or regex filter
  • removeOccasional promotional banners
  • removeCustom filenames require Pro ($9.99/yr)
  • removeInterface can feel cluttered

4. Download All Images

Download All Images takes the most minimal approach on this list. Click the icon, and it immediately starts downloading every image on the page to your default Downloads folder. There is no preview gallery, no filtering interface, and no customization. It downloads everything it finds.

This radical simplicity works for users who want to grab every image from a page without any decision-making. It is extremely fast since there is no intermediate step. However, the lack of any filtering means you end up downloading tiny icons, tracking pixels, and UI elements alongside the actual content images you want. There is no subfolder organization, so all images dump into the root Downloads folder. For pages with hundreds of images, this creates a mess. It also does not detect CSS background images or provide any way to filter by file type.

Pros

  • addOne-click instant download, no setup
  • addExtremely fast execution
  • addZero learning curve
  • addCompletely free

Cons

  • removeNo filtering at all (downloads everything)
  • removeNo preview gallery or selection
  • removeNo subfolder or filename customization
  • removeDownloads icons, tracking pixels, and junk

5. Imageye - Image Downloader

Imageye opens a sidebar panel that displays all detected images from the current page. The sidebar approach is convenient because it lets you browse images without leaving the page you are on. You can filter by minimum dimensions and file type, and the extension detects CSS background images in addition to standard img elements.

The interface is clean and modern. Each image shows a thumbnail, dimensions, and a download button. A "Download All" button at the top grabs every displayed image. Imageye is reliable for straightforward downloading tasks and its sidebar-based workflow feels natural. However, it lacks URL pattern filtering, custom subfolder organization, and filename customization. For users who need more control over where files are saved and how they are named, this becomes a limitation on larger projects. The extension is English-only.

Pros

  • addConvenient sidebar panel (does not leave page)
  • addDetects CSS background images
  • addClean, modern interface
  • addFile type and size filtering

Cons

  • removeNo URL pattern or regex filtering
  • removeNo subfolder or filename customization
  • removeSidebar can feel narrow on smaller screens
  • removeEnglish only

6. Save All Images

Save All Images is a straightforward extension that scans the page for image elements and provides a simple list view. You can filter by minimum image dimensions, and a "Save All" button downloads everything that passes the filter. There is no visual gallery or thumbnail preview -- just a text list of URLs with dimensions.

The extension is lightweight and does its basic job, but it is limited compared to alternatives. It does not detect CSS background images, does not offer file type filtering, and provides no organization features. The list-based interface works but is less user-friendly than gallery or sidebar approaches. For quick, no-frills image grabbing with a size filter, it works. For anything more demanding, you will want a more capable tool.

Pros

  • addLightweight and simple
  • addSize-based filtering
  • addCompletely free
  • addMinimal permissions

Cons

  • removeNo image preview or gallery
  • removeDoes not detect CSS background images
  • removeNo file type filter
  • removeNo subfolder or filename organization

Which Bulk Image Downloader Should You Choose?

The right image downloader depends on how often you download images and how much control you need over the process. Here are our recommendations:

Best for most users: Bulk Image Downloader offers the best combination of detection accuracy, filtering power, and organization features. The visual gallery, size and type filters, URL pattern matching, custom subfolders, and filename patterns make it the most capable option for both casual and professional use. All core features are free.

Best for quick, no-preview downloads: Download All Images is the fastest path from click to files on your hard drive. If you trust that you want everything on the page and will sort through it later, its zero-configuration approach cannot be beaten for speed.

Best sidebar experience: Imageye is ideal if you prefer browsing images alongside the page rather than in a separate tab. Its sidebar approach keeps the page visible while you select images.

Best for multi-page galleries: Fatkun excels at downloading images across multiple open tabs simultaneously. If you frequently work with paginated galleries or need to capture images from several pages at once, its tab capture mode is a significant time saver.

Best for regex power users: Image Downloader and Bulk Image Downloader both support URL-based regex filtering, which is powerful for targeting specific image CDN paths or file naming conventions.

Common Use Cases

Bulk image downloaders serve a wide variety of professional and personal needs. Here are the most common scenarios we encountered:

Design reference collections: Designers and art directors routinely collect visual references from inspiration sites, portfolios, and mood boards. Size filtering lets you skip tiny thumbnails and focus on high-resolution source images.

E-commerce product images: Sellers migrating between platforms or creating marketing materials need to download product photos in bulk. Custom subfolder naming keeps images organized by product or category.

Research and archival: Academics, journalists, and researchers archive visual content from web sources. URL pattern filtering helps isolate relevant images from a page cluttered with ads and UI elements.

Social media content management: Social media managers download visual assets from brand pages, competitor profiles, and stock photo galleries. Batch downloading across tabs accelerates this workflow significantly.

Web development and testing: Developers sometimes need to extract assets from existing websites for analysis, migration, or testing purposes. CSS background image detection ensures nothing is missed.

How We Tested

We installed each extension on a clean Chrome profile and ran it on the same set of test pages: an image gallery with 200+ photos, an e-commerce product listing page, a photography portfolio with lazy-loaded images, and a news article with embedded media. We evaluated the total number of images detected, accuracy of size reporting, download speed, file organization capabilities, and overall user experience.

All extensions were tested on Chrome 132 running on Windows 11. Each extension was used for at least three days of real-world usage across diverse websites before writing the review.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it legal to bulk download images from websites?

Downloading images for personal reference, research, or archival is generally permissible, but you should always respect copyright and terms of service. Do not redistribute or commercially use images without proper licensing. Most image downloader extensions are tools -- the legal responsibility for how you use downloaded images rests with you.

Why do some extensions find more images than others?

Extensions differ in how deeply they scan the page. Basic tools only detect standard img elements in the HTML. More advanced extensions also scan CSS background-image properties, srcset attributes for responsive images, and dynamically loaded (lazy-loaded) content. This is why image counts can vary significantly between extensions on the same page.

Can I download images from password-protected or login-required sites?

Yes, as long as you are logged in and the images are visible in your browser. Image downloader extensions work with the page content that Chrome has already loaded, so they can access anything you can see on screen, including content behind logins.

Do these extensions work with lazy-loaded images?

Most modern image downloader extensions handle lazy-loaded images, but coverage varies. Scrolling to the bottom of the page before triggering the extension ensures that all lazy-loaded images have been loaded into the DOM. Extensions that scan srcset and data-src attributes tend to catch more lazy-loaded images than those that only check the standard src attribute.

Why are some downloaded images very small or appear as icons?

Web pages contain many small images besides the main content: favicons, tracking pixels, button icons, social media badges, and UI elements. Using a minimum size filter (for example, 200x200 pixels) effectively removes these from your download batch and focuses on actual content images.

Final Thoughts

A good bulk image downloader extension saves significant time compared to downloading images individually. The key differentiators are detection accuracy (does it find all the images, including CSS backgrounds?), filtering capability (can you narrow down to exactly what you want?), and organization (does it keep your Downloads folder clean?).

If you are unsure where to start, try Bulk Image Downloader -- it is free to install and covers everything from quick single-page downloads to complex multi-filter batch operations. You can always switch to a simpler tool if you decide you need less.