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One thing to keep in mind if you’re a Canva Free user is any Pro Content, including templates and images, will be watermarked. Users can remove this watermark (opens in a new tab or window) by purchasing a one-off Content license for use in a single design.
At Canva, content can be either Free or Pro. You can use Free content at no cost – as the name suggests! Our Free and Pro Content licenses cover all of the content we offer (except for Popular Music!) from photos, icons and illustrations, to videos, audio, fonts and templates.
Canva gives you non-exclusive licenses to use stock Content in your designs, (including photos, graphics, videos, fonts, and music) for a range of permitted uses. This includes the ability to sell certain types of designs that contain Content.
Generally, images marked as “free” in Canva are either in the public domain, have been licensed under Creative Commons licenses, or are provided by Canva’s contributors under Canva’s own license terms.
Generally, the Canva Content Licensing Agreement (CLA) allows both free and pro users to use Canva images for different purposes. You can use it to design marketing materials, invitations, school projects, social media posts, commercials, book covers, and a host of others.
But are Canva images copyright free? In this article, we'll take a look at the copyright policies of Canva and find out if it's safe for authors to use their images and graphics in their books or on their book covers.
Our Free and Pro Content licenses cover all of the content we offer – from photos, icons, and illustrations, to videos, audio, fonts, and templates. Below, we explain what these licenses allow. For Canva Free users, Pro content is watermarked .