Flight Attendant Photos
That Clear the First Screening

Cabin crew hiring is one of the few jobs where the application literally requires a photo. Airlines spell out the spec, screeners enforce it fast, and a selfie that meets it beats a studio shot that doesn't.

Create My Application Photo
Professional cabin crew application headshot of a woman in a blazer
Aircraft galley selfie of a female flight attendant in uniform before headshot generation
The selfie
Application-ready
Professional cabin crew application headshot of a man in a business suit
Boarding door selfie of a male flight attendant before headshot generation
The selfie
Application-ready

The Only Job Interview That Starts With a Photo

Airlines hire for a customer-facing, safety-critical, uniformed role, so they screen for presentation from the first click. The requirements are published and specific: professional attire, plain background, natural smile, recent, unfiltered. Recruiters sorting thousands of applications use the photo as the first gate, before qualifications, before the video interview.

Current crew need photos too: transfer applications to international carriers, and the move to corporate or private aviation, where a polished personal presentation is the entire audition. One selfie in the galley covers it.

From Selfie to Compliant Application Photo

Three steps, about a minute:

  1. 1Take a clear, front-facing selfie against any background, hair neat, as you'd show up to the interview.
  2. 2Upload it, pick business suit or blazer, a white or light gray background, and the smile preset.
  3. 3Check the free preview against your airline's photo spec, then download the full-resolution version for $5.

How It Works

Step 1:

Upload a selfie

Step 2:

Our AI goes to work

Step 3:

Download ready in seconds

Cabin Crew Photo FAQ

Do airlines really require photos with applications?

Yes, and it's nearly unique to this industry. Most airlines ask for a professional headshot and often a full-length photo with the application, and international carriers are stricter still. The photo gets screened before a human ever reads your work history.

What do airlines want to see in the headshot?

Business attire, a plain light background, hair neat and off the face, a warm genuine smile, and no filters. Think 'ready for the cabin, photographed for a passport'. The business suit or blazer preset on a white or light gray background hits the brief exactly.

Thousands of people apply. Does the photo actually move the needle?

Major airlines receive enormous applicant pools for each cabin crew class, and recruiters screen fast. A photo that meets the spec doesn't win the job, your interview does that, but a photo that misses the spec can end the application in seconds. This is about not failing the first filter.

What happens to the photo I upload?

It's processed to generate your headshot, and the images expire after 24 hours. No account is created and nothing is published anywhere. Only you get the link.

How much does it cost?

The watermarked preview is free, the full-resolution photo is $5. Studio 'airline application packages' charge $100 to $300 for the same clean result. Save the money for the relocation.

Applying to other roles too? See headshots for job applications and the LinkedIn headshot page.

Cleared for the Next Round

One selfie, free preview, $5 for the full-resolution photo that meets the spec. The interview is still yours to win.

Get My Free Preview