For ants at home
Get a first clue for common indoor and garden ants before you compare the result with local species and pest-control advice.
Free ant photo identifier
Upload a clear ant photo for AI suggestions across 10,528 ant species.
Select an image/video or drag it here
JPEG, PNG, RAW, TIFF, MP4, MOV, WEBM · up to 20 MBLocation of ants
Upload or paste an image of an ant to get started.
If you found an ant on the kitchen counter, pavement, garden soil, patio, school project, or in an ant farm, start with a photo. AntScout compares the image with ant species data and gives a ranked set of likely matches. The result can help you answer normal questions like which ant is this, whether it might be a queen ant, and what species pages are worth checking next.
Get a first clue for common indoor and garden ants before you compare the result with local species and pest-control advice.
Compare a large ant with wings, wing scars, and a broad thorax against likely species matches.
Identify ants seen on walks, field trips, sidewalks, plants, logs, or soil without needing advanced myrmecology terms.
Photograph one ant as close and sharp as possible. A side view, top view, or clear phone macro photo usually works better than a distant picture of many ants.
Drop the image into the AntScout ant identification tool. You can add a location to help narrow down local species.
Review the suggested species, genus, and confidence score. Use the result as a starting point when species look very similar.
The tool looks at features such as body shape, color, head, waist, thorax, antennae, legs, and overall proportions. Adding a country or region can improve the result because many ant species only live in certain parts of the world.
People often search for ant identification because they found a small black ant, red ant, brown ant, flying ant, carpenter-ant look-alike, or fire-ant look-alike. AntScout can help narrow down the likely species, but identification is only one part of deciding what to do next.
If ants are damaging wood, stinging, nesting indoors, or appearing in large numbers, treat the result as a clue rather than a treatment plan. Compare the match with local species and contact a local pest professional when safety or property damage is involved.
A queen ant is usually larger than workers of the same species and often has a broad thorax, wings, or visible wing scars after a nuptial flight. Males can also have wings, so size alone is not enough. Uploading a clear photo can help AntScout narrow the species or genus, then you can compare queen traits on the matching species pages.
If the result suggests a queen, check the matching species page before keeping it. Care needs can differ a lot between species, especially during colony founding.
Think of AntScout as a knowledgeable field guide rather than a laboratory microscope. While the AI recognizes many visual traits, nature is full of look-alike species. A phone photo might not capture the tiny hairs, sculpturing, teeth, or wing veins needed for a 100% scientific ID.
For most hobbyists and nature observers, the result is still a useful starting point. It can often point you to the correct genus, species group, or likely species so you know what to compare next.
We believe modern AI should respect both our planet and your personal privacy. Here is how AntScout’s identification models are engineered for efficiency and ethics:
Running one identification uses about 2 watt-seconds of energy, which is equivalent to keeping your smartphone screen on for just 2 seconds!
By running on efficient, air-cooled server hardware rather than massive liquid-cooled datacenters, our AI processes require zero water consumption.
Your photos are processed entirely in memory, securely deleted immediately after, and are never saved on our servers.
Our AI model is exclusively trained on images with permissive Creative Commons (CC BY) or public domain licenses.
Upload a clear photo of the ant and AntScout will suggest the most likely ant species or genus. It is built for everyday questions like ants in your house, ants in the garden, a queen ant you found outside, or an ant from an ant farm.
Yes. A sharp phone photo is often enough to narrow an ant down to a likely species, genus, or species group. Try to capture the whole body, antennae, waist, legs, and head instead of a blurry close-up of only part of the ant.
The tool is useful as a fast field guide, not as a guaranteed scientific determination. Many ant species need microscope-level traits, so AntScout may return a genus or species group when the photo does not contain enough detail.
AntScout can help narrow down the likely species or genus, then you can compare visible queen traits manually. Queens usually have a larger thorax, a larger body, wings, or wing scars, but the exact signs vary by species.
AntScout can suggest common household and outdoor ant matches when the species is represented in the model. If ants are damaging wood, stinging, or appearing in large numbers indoors, use the result as an identification clue and contact a local pest professional for treatment advice.
No. The page is written for beginners and normal nature observers too. You can start with a photo and then use the suggested species page to learn the scientific name, range, care notes, and similar species.
Yes. The AntScout ant identification tool is free to use in your browser and works on desktop and mobile.