Freepik Magnific Signals Shift Toward Unified AI Creative Platform

Freepik Magnific Signals Shift Toward Unified AI Creative Platform

A decade and a half after its quiet start as a search engine for graphic resources, Freepik has reintroduced itself under a new name, Magnific, marking a turning point in how the company sees its role in the creative industry.

The Málaga-based firm said the relaunch reflects a broader consolidation of tools that had, until recently, been treated as separate products. What began in 2010 as a resource hub has evolved into a platform that now combines image generation, video production, audio tools, and collaborative workspaces within a single environment.

Chief executive Joaquín Cuenca described the move less as a reinvention than a clarification. For years, he suggested, users interacted with isolated pieces of the company’s technology without seeing how they connected. The rebrand, he said, is meant to present that system as one.

The scale of the business offers some context. Magnific reports $200 million in annual recurring revenue and more than one million paying subscribers. It also counts over 250 enterprise clients, including teams at BBC, DeliveryHero, Guess, and Huel, which are already using the platform for production-level creative work rather than early-stage testing.

That shift from experimentation to routine use is becoming more visible. Companies are no longer treating generative AI as an add-on but as part of their day-to-day workflow, producing campaign materials and adapting content across markets with fewer traditional constraints.

The company’s newer business-focused plan, introduced earlier this year, has gained traction among smaller teams. It passed 2,000 subscriptions within weeks, suggesting demand is not limited to large organisations.

At the same time, the user base itself is changing. Magnific says a significant share of new creators on the platform identify as beginners, a signal that the barriers to entry in creative production are lowering. Tasks that once required specialised teams and equipment are increasingly handled by individuals working independently.

Cuenca framed this as part of a wider economic transition, describing the emergence of what he called a “no-collar” workforce — people operating outside traditional job categories, enabled by accessible tools and flexible workflows.

The company’s current offering includes high-resolution image and video generation, upscaling technology, real-time collaboration features, and a library of more than 250 million assets. These elements, previously distributed across different services, are now presented as parts of a single production system.

Magnific’s origins remain tied to Málaga, where it was built and later acquired in 2024. Its growth without large-scale external funding has drawn attention in Europe’s technology sector, particularly as it competes with better-capitalised platforms in the United States.

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For now, the relaunch appears to be less about changing direction and more about drawing a clearer line through what the company has already become — a platform where creative work is no longer confined to studios, but shaped increasingly by tools that continue to expand in reach and capability.


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