A Lightroom preset is not a filter. Photographers who buy them know that. They are buying a look that took someone else months of shooting and editing to develop, and they want to apply it to their own work without the same investment. That is a real value exchange and buyers understand it.
The math on where the money goes is less well understood. Platforms like Gumroad charge around 10% per transaction. Adobe's own marketplace takes a larger share. For a €24 preset pack, that is €2.40 per sale leaving your account before it arrives. Sell 200 packs in a year and €480 has moved to platform fees for file delivery, which is still just a ZIP attachment in an automated email.
What preset buyers are actually paying for
Before getting into the technical setup, it is worth being clear about the product, because the most common mismatch in preset marketing is treating presets as a software feature when buyers buy them as a visual identity.
When someone buys a preset pack from a photographer they follow, they are not primarily buying "warm tones and film grain." They are buying the specific look of that photographer's work, packaged in a way they can apply to their own photos. The value is in the style, not the file. That distinction matters for how you describe the product and how you market it.
Presets that sell well have an identifiable, consistent aesthetic that is visible across the seller's own portfolio. The buyer has already seen what the result looks like before they open the product page. The product page just confirms the price and delivers the file.
The platform cost in real numbers
For photographers at the beginning of selling presets, €2.40 per sale looks like a small number. At scale it is not.
What makes a preset product page actually convert
Most preset pages fail at description. The format almost always follows the same pattern: a before/after image or two, a list of what is included, a price. The before/after is the right instinct. The description is usually where it goes wrong.
The second version tells the buyer exactly what aesthetic they are buying and shows the seller has tested it across real conditions. The first version describes a file format.
Pricing preset packs
Preset pricing has a few informal tiers that correlate with what buyers expect at each level:
- Single presets or mini-packs (3-5 presets): €9 to €19. Buyers testing the aesthetic before committing.
- Standard packs (8-15 presets): €19 to €39. The most common range for established creators.
- Large bundles or seasonal collections: €39 to €79. Buyers building a full editing toolkit.
- Workflow packs with tutorial or editing guide: €49 to €99. Higher-perceived-value packaging.
Pricing below €15 for a full pack puts you in competition with the large volume of free presets available from YouTube tutorials and creator promotions. Buyers comparing on price at that level will always find something cheaper. Buyers willing to pay €24+ are comparing on aesthetic fit and trust in the seller's work.
Anna, a travel photographer from Warsaw, launched her first preset pack at €12. She sold a few copies from Instagram but conversion was low. She raised the price to €28 and updated the description to open with the specific look: "The colour grade from my coastal Portugal series, high contrast, desaturated greens, warm skin tones." Conversion went up. Her explanation was simple: buyers at €28 were not comparing her presets to YouTube freebies. They wanted that specific look. The same pattern shows up in pricing psychology: cheap often signals generic, not accessible.
How file delivery works
Lightroom presets come in two formats: .xmp files (for Lightroom Classic and Lightroom CC desktop) and .dng files (for Lightroom mobile). A well-packaged preset download includes both, with a short readme explaining installation for each. The whole thing goes in a ZIP.
Delivery through Stripe: buyer pays, confirmation email sends with a download link to the ZIP file. Time-limited link, limited download attempts. That is the complete fulfilment pipeline. No manual steps, nothing to track. The broader setup is in how to sell digital downloads online.
Set up once, it runs without intervention. The only thing to check periodically is whether the download link configuration is still active, and whether the ZIP file is still accessible at the stored URL.
Where preset buyers come from
Preset buyers are almost entirely driven by visual content showing the presets in use. Before/after pairs on Instagram and TikTok are the primary discovery channel by a significant margin. Email newsletters for photographers come second. Search is a smaller but consistent source for specific queries.
The content format that converts consistently is a side-by-side before/after with the unedited RAW on one side and the preset-applied result on the other, showing a real photo from a real shoot. Not a test shot. Not a neutral subject. The kind of photo the buyer wants to take.
The content that does not convert: the seller looking at their screen with a Lightroom panel open. Buyers are not buying the software experience. They are buying the output. Show the output.
For search: specific queries like "Lightroom presets film look Sony A7" or "Lightroom preset warm portrait outdoor" do produce traffic. Broad queries like "Lightroom presets" are dominated by major platforms and review sites. The product page description should contain the specific terms a buyer in your target aesthetic would type. If you are weighing whether a platform is still worth its cut, the no-commission breakdown helps with that decision.
Tomasz, a portrait photographer from Krakow, released a preset pack targeting the "clean, slightly cool editorial look" common in commercial fashion work. He posted three before/afters per week on Instagram for four weeks before opening sales. By the time the product page went live, there were 200 saves on his preview posts. He sold 40 packs in the first week without any paid promotion.
Your action plan
- Package the file correctly: .xmp presets for desktop Lightroom, .dng for mobile, both in a single ZIP with a one-page installation readme.
- Write the product description around the aesthetic and the conditions it was designed for. Name the specific look, the specific shooting situations, the camera systems tested.
- Set up Stripe verification now. It takes 1-3 business days and is the only step you cannot complete immediately.
- Create 3-5 before/after posts showing the preset on real photographs from your portfolio. Publish them before the product page goes live. Let the audience see the result before the product exists.
- Share the product page link once the before/afters are live. No launch campaign needed. The before/afters are the campaign.