Aya Photo / Guides

Is there an Aesth app for Android?

Updated July 10, 2026 · by the Aya Photo team

Short answer, no dancing around it: there is no Aesth app for Android. As of July 2026, Aesth: Aesthetic AI Photos (by fanzzz Inc., and often misspelled Aesthy) is an Apple-only app. It runs on iPhone, iPad, a Mac with Apple silicon, and Apple Vision Pro, and it requires iOS 15.0 or later. It is not on the Google Play Store, and there is no official Android build. If you're on a Pixel, a Samsung, or any other Android phone, you cannot install Aesth today.

That's the part everyone comes here for, so it goes first. The rest of this page is the useful part: why to ignore anything calling itself an "Aesth APK," what actually works on Android right now, and what to do if you have an iPad or a Mac lying around.

There is no safe "Aesth APK" — please don't sideload one

Search "Aesth APK" and you'll find third-party download sites happy to hand you a file. Here is the plain truth: none of them is the real app, because the real app does not exist for Android. There is nothing legitimate to package.

Sideloading an APK from an unofficial mirror is one of the best-documented ways to end up with malware or a credential thief on your phone. Fake builds that impersonate popular iOS apps are a classic lure — the app you wanted isn't on Android, so a "port" appears to fill the gap, and it isn't a port at all. An AI photo app is a particularly bad thing to fake, because the whole point is that you feed it clear, front-facing selfies of your face. That is exactly the kind of app you should never install from anywhere but an official store.

We're not going to link to any APK site, and we'd gently suggest you don't go looking. If an app isn't on Google Play or the App Store, the safe move is to wait for it to arrive there — not to route around the store.

What Android users can actually use today

You didn't come here to be told "no" and sent away. So here's something real that works on your phone right now, no install and no APK: the Copy Shot web app at copyshot.app. Copy Shot is made by the same team as Aya Photo, and it runs entirely in a modern browser — including the browser already on your Android phone. Open start.copyshot.app, and you're in.

The idea is the same one Aesth is built on. You give it a reference photo — any look you want to recreate — add a couple of clear selfies, and it sends back eight shots of you in that style. Because it's a web app, there's nothing to sideload, nothing to grant sketchy permissions to, and nothing sitting in a third-party APK. It's the honest answer to "what can I use on Android this minute."

If you want the reference-photo approach explained in more depth, we wrote it up in how to make aesthetic AI photos, and we lined up the other options in the best Aesth alternatives.

What about Aya Photo on Android?

Fair question, since we're the ones writing this. Aya Photo is an iPhone app. Our Android build is in development and not yet released — there is no Google Play listing for it yet, and we're not going to pretend otherwise. When people ask "is Aya Photo on Android," the truthful answer today is "not yet."

What we can do is tell you the moment it changes. Leave your email and you'll get a single note when the Android app is live — no listing to fake, no APK to chase.

Get notified when Android lands

In the meantime, the Copy Shot web app above gives you the core experience — reference photo, selfies, eight shots — in your Android browser today. And if you're curious what the full Aya Photo app does, there's a rundown in Aya Photo vs Aesth.

If you have an iPad or a Mac, you already have a way in

A lot of Android phone owners also have an Apple device sitting nearby, and Aesth runs on more than the iPhone. Because it's an Apple app that supports iPad, a Mac with Apple silicon (M1 or newer), and Apple Vision Pro, any of those will run it — you don't need to borrow an iPhone just to try AI photos.

If you have an iPad on iOS 15 or later, install Aesth from the App Store there. An Apple-silicon Mac can run compatible iPhone and iPad apps directly. Either one gets you around the "my phone is Android" problem without touching a sideloaded file — and Aya Photo is on the App Store too, so those devices can run it as well.

The bottom line

Aesth is Apple-only as of July 2026, there's no Google Play listing, and there is no legitimate Android APK — anything claiming to be one is a risk, not a shortcut. If you're on Android and want to make photos today, use the Copy Shot web app in your browser. If you'd rather wait for our native app, join the Aya Photo Android list and we'll ping you when it's real. And if there's an iPad or an Apple-silicon Mac in the house, both Aesth and Aya Photo will run there right now.

This guide is written by the Aya Photo team. We're not affiliated with Aesth or fanzzz Inc. Platform availability described here is as of July 2026, verified against Aesth's public App Store listing. Store availability can change — check the listing before you assume.

Aesth on Android, answered

Is Aesth on Google Play?

No. As of July 2026 Aesth is an Apple-only app — iPhone, iPad, Mac with Apple silicon, and Apple Vision Pro, on iOS 15 or later. There's no Google Play listing and no official Android build.

Is there an Aesth APK?

Nothing official, because Aesth doesn't ship an Android app. Any "Aesth APK" you find is not the real app, and sideloading one is unsafe — fake ports of popular iOS apps are a known route for malware and credential theft. Don't hand your selfies to an unofficial download.

What can Android users use instead?

The Copy Shot web app at start.copyshot.app, today — it runs in any modern browser including on Android: reference photo, selfies, eight shots back. Aya Photo's own Android app is in development and not yet released; the alternatives guide covers the rest.

Is it Aesth or Aesthy?

The app's real name is Aesth — full App Store title "Aesth: Aesthetic AI Photos", by fanzzz Inc. Aesthy is a common misspelling. Either way, it's Apple-only, so "Aesthy for Android" doesn't exist any more than "Aesth for Android" does.

Making photos on Android? Start in your browser.

No install, no APK. Paste any photo, add 2–3 selfies, get an 8-shot photoshoot back — right now, on the phone you already have.