Free Bug Identifier by Photo —
What Bug Is This?
Upload a photo of any bug or insect and our AI bug identifier tells you the species instantly — including whether it may sting or bite, where it is commonly found, and what to do if you found it indoors. Works for beetles, flies, wasps, caterpillars, true bugs, and more. No app or account required.
How to Identify a Bug in 3 Steps
No entomology degree required — our AI bug identifier does the hard work for you.
Upload Your Bug Photo
Take a clear, well-lit photo against a plain background. Upload up to 3 images — a full view, a close-up of markings, and a side view give the best results.
Add Optional Details
Tell us where you found it, how big it is, and what it was doing — flying, crawling, on a plant, or indoors. More context means better accuracy.
Get Your Identification
Our AI analyses body shape, wing type, leg count, antennae, colour markings, and behaviour to give you a detailed identification with safety notes and key features.
Upload a Bug Photo to Identify It
Drag and drop your image below, click to browse, or use your camera. JPG, PNG, and WEBP up to 5 MB. Upload up to 3 angles for the most accurate result.
Identify Your Bug
Upload a clear photo and get an instant species identification with safety guidance.
- 1 Upload photo
- 2 Add context
- 3 Get results
Upload up to 3 angles for best results
Best results: Photograph in good daylight with the bug in sharp focus. Place it on a plain white or dark background. Include a coin or ruler for scale. Add location and behaviour in the optional details field.
How to Take a Better Bug Photo for Identification
A clear photo is the single biggest factor in accurate bug identification. Follow these tips for a more precise result.
✓ Do This
✗ Avoid This
Pro Tip — Capture Key Features
Insects have six legs, three body segments (head, thorax, abdomen), and usually antennae. Photograph from above to show wing type (two pairs, one pair, or none), and from the side to show body shape. These features are the fastest way to narrow down the insect order.
Add Context in the Notes Field
Mention where you found the bug: kitchen, garden, bathroom, or outdoor plant. Note its behaviour: flying, crawling, jumping, or swarming. Include your country or region — the same-looking bug may be a harmless native species in one area and an invasive pest in another.
What Type of Bug Did You Find?
Our free bug identifier works across all major insect groups and common household pests.
Beetles
Hard wing covers (elytra) over folded flight wings. The largest insect order with over 400,000 species. Found everywhere from gardens to pantries.
Flies & Mosquitoes
One pair of wings (second pair reduced to halteres). Large compound eyes and short antennae. Includes house flies, fruit flies, horse flies, and mosquitoes.
Bees & Wasps
Hymenoptera with two pairs of wings, narrow waist, and often bright warning colours. Includes beneficial pollinators and some stinging species.
Butterflies & Moths
Large colourful wings covered in scales. Butterflies fly by day with clubbed antennae; moths mostly fly at night with feathery or thread-like antennae.
Caterpillars & Larvae
Immature stages of butterflies, moths, beetles, and flies. Soft-bodied with distinct head capsule. Often found on plants and leaves.
Household Pests
Bugs commonly found indoors that may need identification for pest control or peace of mind. Our AI flags potential nuisance or damage-causing species.
Why Use This Free Bug Identifier?
Built for homeowners, gardeners, hikers, parents, students, and anyone who spots a bug and wants a fast answer.
Photo-Based Identification
Our AI analyses body shape, wing type, leg count, antennae, colour markings, and size from your photo — the same features an entomologist examines in the field.
Powered by Claude AI
Powered by Anthropic’s Claude — trained across thousands of insect species for expert-level identification with detailed reasoning and confidence scores.
Detailed Identification Report
Every result includes common name, scientific name, insect order, danger level, habitat, behaviour, and practical advice on what to do if found indoors.
Region-Aware Results
Tell us your country or region and we factor in local species distribution. A bug in the UK may be a very different species than the same-looking bug in North America.
Works on Any Device
Use directly in your browser on any phone, tablet, or computer. No app download, no account, no payment — completely free every time.
More Identifier Tools
Found something more specific? Use our specialist tools — from spider identifier to ant identifier — each with tailored AI prompts.
How to Identify Bugs — What the AI Looks For
When you upload a photo to our free bug identifier, the AI analyses the same visual features an entomologist would examine. Understanding these features helps you take better photos and interpret your results more confidently.
Body Segments and Shape
True insects have three body segments: head, thorax, and abdomen. The relative size and shape of each segment helps identify the insect order. Wasps have a very narrow waist; beetles have a hard, rounded body; caterpillars appear to have only head and body (the thorax and abdomen are fused).
Leg Count and Type
Insects always have six legs attached to the thorax. Spiders have eight legs and two body segments — if you see eight legs, use our spider identifier instead. Leg shape matters too: jumping legs on grasshoppers, grasping forelegs on mantises, and swimming hairs on water bugs.
Wings and Wing Covers
Wing type is one of the strongest identification clues. Beetles have hard elytra covering folded wings. Flies have one visible pair of wings. Butterflies and moths have large scaled wings. True bugs have half-leathery, half-membranous forewings. Some insects have no wings at all.
Antennae
Antenna shape varies enormously between insect groups. Butterflies have clubbed tips; moths have feathery or thread-like antennae; beetles often have elbowed antennae; flies have short stubby antennae. A close-up photo of the head region dramatically improves accuracy.
Colour and Markings
Bright warning colours (yellow and black, red and black) often indicate stinging or toxic species. Camouflage patterns help insects blend into bark, leaves, or soil. Spots, stripes, and metallic sheens all narrow down the possibilities — but colour alone is never enough for a definitive ID.
When Photos Are Not Enough
AI bug identification from photos is powerful but has limits. For pest infestations, bites, stings, or agricultural damage, always consult a local pest control expert or extension service. Never rely solely on an online tool for safety-critical or commercial decisions.
Common Bugs and How to Identify Them
These are the bugs people most frequently upload to our identifier. Understanding their key features helps you provide better information and interpret your result.
Ladybird (Ladybug)
Round, dome-shaped beetle with short legs and hard wing covers. Red or orange with black spots is the classic pattern, but species vary widely. Beneficial garden predator that eats aphids. Completely harmless.
House Fly
Medium grey fly with one pair of wings and large red compound eyes. At rest, wings angle outward. Found around food, bins, and windows. Annoying but not dangerous. Indicates sanitation may need attention.
German Cockroach
Small light-brown cockroach with two dark stripes on the pronotum (behind the head). Fast-moving, nocturnal, found in kitchens and bathrooms. Indicates a potential infestation requiring professional treatment.
Paper Wasp
Slender wasp with long legs that dangle in flight. Builds open paper nests under eaves and sheltered areas. Yellow and brown markings. Can sting if nest is disturbed. Beneficial predator of garden pests.
Monarch Caterpillar
Distinctive yellow, black, and white banded caterpillar with black tentacles at front and rear. Found on milkweed plants. Harmless and transforms into the iconic orange monarch butterfly. Do not confuse with harmful look-alikes.
Stink Bug
Shield-shaped true bug with a triangular scutellum on the back. Brown or green colour. Releases a foul odour when disturbed. Some species are invasive agricultural pests; others are harmless natives.
Are Most Bugs Harmful?
The vast majority of insects are completely harmless to humans. Of the roughly 1 million known insect species, fewer than 1% are considered pests. Most insects play vital roles in pollination, decomposition, and natural pest control.
- Beneficial insects — ladybirds, lacewings, and parasitic wasps eat garden pests. Bees and butterflies pollinate crops and wildflowers.
- Non-aggressive — most insects flee rather than attack. Stings and bites are almost always defensive responses.
- Region matters — pest status varies by location. A common garden insect in one country may be an invasive species in another.
- Indoor vs outdoor — finding a single bug indoors is usually harmless. Repeated sightings of the same species may indicate an infestation worth investigating.
What to Do After Identifying Your Bug
Once you have your identification result, here is how to act on it:
- Harmless species outdoors — leave it alone. It is part of a healthy ecosystem controlling pests and pollinating plants.
- Single bug indoors — gently remove it and release outside, or vacuum it up. Seal cracks and gaps to prevent more from entering.
- Potential pest species — check for signs of infestation (droppings, damage, egg cases). Contact pest control if you find multiple specimens.
- Stinging insects near home — do not disturb nests. Contact a professional for safe removal, especially near doorways or children’s play areas.
- Bug bite or sting — clean the area, apply a cold compress, and watch for allergic reactions. Seek medical attention for severe swelling, difficulty breathing, or spreading redness.
Frequently Asked Questions — Bug Identification
Answers to the most common questions about identifying bugs online for free.
Ready to Identify Your Bug?
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