The Professional Real Estate Editing Workflow
A consistent editing workflow is what separates hobby-level real estate photos from professional ones. This is the exact workflow used by photographers shooting 10+ listings per week.
Step 1: Import and Organize
Import your RAW files into Lightroom Classic. Use a folder structure like: /2026/04-April/123-Main-St/. Apply these import settings:
Save- Build 1:1 previews (speeds up editing)
- Apply lens corrections on import
- Add copyright metadata
- Add keywords: property address, city, agent name
Step 2: HDR Merge
Select your bracket sets (3 or 5 frames per composition). Press Ctrl+H (Photo > Photo Merge > HDR):
- Auto Align: ON (compensates for tiny tripod shifts)
- Auto Settings: OFF (we want manual control)
- Deghost Amount: None — only use Low if there was actual movement (ceiling fan, curtain)
This creates a .DNG file with massive dynamic range — you now have detail in both the bright windows and dark corners.
Step 3: Transform and Straighten
This is the most important step for professional-looking results. Go to the Transform panel:
- Click Guided mode
- Draw two vertical lines along door frames, wall edges, or window frames
- Draw one horizontal line along a counter, shelf, or ceiling line
- The image will correct converging verticals and leaning walls
Pro tip: if the Auto mode gives good results, use it. But manually guided corrections are almost always more accurate for interiors.
Step 4: Exposure and Tone
| Slider | Typical Value | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Exposure | +0.3 to +0.7 | Bright and airy feel — RE photos should feel inviting |
| Highlights | -40 to -60 | Recover window detail without making them gray |
| Shadows | +30 to +50 | Open up dark corners and under-cabinet areas |
| Whites | +10 to +20 | Keep whites punchy (countertops, walls) |
| Blacks | -5 to -10 | Maintain contrast, prevent washed-out look |
| Clarity | +10 to +15 | Subtle edge definition — do NOT exceed +20 for RE |
| Vibrance | +8 to +12 | Gentle color boost without oversaturating skin tones |
| Saturation | 0 to +5 | Leave near zero — vibrance handles color better |
Step 5: White Balance Correction
Mixed lighting is the #1 challenge in real estate. Most homes have daylight (5500K) coming through windows and tungsten (3000K) from ceiling lights, creating orange/blue color casts.
- Start with the Eyedropper tool — click on a white wall or white countertop
- Fine-tune: Temp around 4500-5000K, Tint +5 to +10
- If one area is too orange (tungsten lamp): use an HSL adjustment or local brush to desaturate orange in that area
Step 6: Local Adjustments
Use Lightroom brushes and gradients for:
- Window pulls: Brush over blown windows, reduce exposure -1 to -2 stops, add clarity +20
- Dark corners: Brush with exposure +0.5, shadows +30
- Green lawn: Graduated filter, push vibrance +15, saturation +10
- Sky replacement: If the sky is white, select it with a linear gradient, reduce exposure -1, add blue temp shift
Step 7: Batch Apply and Export
Once you have edited one hero shot (usually the living room or kitchen), sync settings to similar-lit shots:
- Select the edited photo
- Select similar photos (Shift+click)
- Click Sync Settings — check all boxes except Transform and Crop
- Fine-tune each photo individually (30-60 seconds each)
Export settings for MLS:
Save- Format: JPEG
- Color Space: sRGB
- Quality: 85
- Resize: Long Edge 3000px
- Sharpen: Screen, Standard
For a faster workflow, apply our Real Estate HDR Preset Pack as a starting point — it handles steps 4-5 in one click, then you just fine-tune per image.
Skylum’s Luminar Neo has the industry’s best one-click sky replacement and atmosphere AI — the two edits real estate listings need most. Tagged as affiliate per FTC.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should it take to edit a real estate listing?
With a preset-based workflow, a standard 25-photo listing should take 30-45 minutes. Without presets, expect 60-90 minutes. The key is consistency — once you develop your editing style, you are mostly fine-tuning rather than starting from scratch each time.
Should I use Lightroom or Photoshop for real estate editing?
Lightroom Classic for 90% of the work. Photoshop for advanced compositing: window pulls, object removal (removing outlets, personal items), and virtual staging. Most basic listings never need Photoshop.
What Lightroom presets work best for real estate?
Look for presets specifically designed for interior/architecture photography — general landscape or portrait presets will give wrong results. A good RE preset should brighten shadows, control highlights, correct for mixed lighting, and add subtle clarity without over-processing.
How do I fix yellow/orange color casts from indoor lighting?
Three approaches: (1) Set white balance to 3800-4200K to cool the overall image. (2) Use the HSL panel to reduce orange and yellow saturation by -20 to -30. (3) Use a local brush on the worst areas with a cooler color temperature. Often a combination of all three works best.
Should I use virtual staging?
Yes for empty listings — virtually staged photos get 40% more clicks on Zillow. Use tools like Virtual Staging AI or BoxBrownie ($32/image). Always disclose virtual staging in the listing. Only stage key rooms: living room, master bedroom, and kitchen/dining.