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Digital Photography Tips, Tutorials and Resources

Top 11 Places to Sell Photos Online and Make Money

by Alexandra Bateman on Aug 11, 2023

Do you want to sell your photos online and make some money? Wondering which websites allow you to sell stock photos?

As a photographer, you can easily earn some extra cash (or even start a new career!) if you know the right places to sell your photos online. Photographers of various skill levels are in high demand for their work, now more than ever. Everyone from large corporations, small and medium size businesses to bloggers, graphic designers, marketers and publishers buy and use photos regularly online. 

In this guide, we will share the top 12 best places to sell photos online and make money doing what you love.

Who Buys Stock Photos, and What Type of Photos Sell the Best?

The largest buying base of stock photos are bloggers and small to medium sized website business owners.

What type of images are they buying the most of?

  • People — kids, adults and everyone in between from every country and culture!
  • People working — These images are very popular with businesses. Folks working on laptops, writing, speaking at a meeting, etc. Just don’t make them so generic they become a meme.
  • Food — Various types of delicious foods even empty unwashed plates.
  • Tools — Gears, hammers, nuts, bolts and screws can convey a lot of things for potential buyers.
  • Cities — Cityscapes, buildings, people commuting.
  • Nature — This is a no brainer which never gets old to shoot or sell.
  • Travel — Shots from around the world are always in high demand.

Pro-tip: Have a look at the categories for some of the image marketplaces we’ll discuss to see some more of the most popular images.

Best Places to Sell Your Photos Online

1. On Your Own Website

The number one best place to sell photos online is on your own website.

That’s because:

  • You can set your own prices.
  • No one else takes a cut.
  • You have 100% control over how to display your photos.
  • You can set your own terms and conditions.
  • In short, YOU’RE in control!

Don’t have a website yet? It’s not hard to start. Check this simple guide on how to create a photography website in WordPress. The majority of professional photography sites online are created on WordPress.

After creating your website, you need to showcase the photos beautifully to attract visitors and convince them to buy your images. We recommend using a top-rated WordPress plugin like Envira Gallery to create image galleries for your photos.

Envira Gallery

You can also create photo albums with beautiful customizable Lightboxes to display and categorize your images to stand out from your competitors.

Envira Gallery plugin also has a WooCommerce add-on that allows you to sell photos easily. If you choose to sell your images on your own site, make sure you learn how to sell your photos in WordPress.

Alternatively, if you decide not to use WordPress, here is a definitive guide on how to create a website using Wix or Squarespace.

2. Adobe Stock

Fotolia

Adobe Stock (formerly Fotolia) is a stock photo marketplace by the maker of the most popular photo editing software solutions, including Photoshop and Lightroom. This platform has been around for over 10 years and known to be the very first online marketplace to sell photos.

The thing you’ll like most about Adobe Stock is their royalty share, which is higher than other online shops.

Photos uploaded at Fotolia become a part of the Adobe Stock library, which means they are also available in other Adobe applications and thus reach millions of Adobe users and potential buyers.

Contributors make anywhere from 20% – 60% with Adobe Stock. And, unlike some other marketplaces, Adobe Stock does not force you to give them exclusive selling rights to your images. So, you can sell on Adobe Stock and other platforms at the same time.

Given the behemoth that Adobe is, it’s likely that Adobe Stock will continue to become a prime destination for buyers and sellers of stock photography.

You can start selling on Adobe Stock’s site here.

3. Shutterstock

Shutterstock best places to sell photos

Shutterstock has been a popular site for over 15 years to buy stock photos online. They have over 200 million images, videos, and music tracks for folks to purchase royalty free, which also means they have millions of purchasing customers.

As a photographer, you can earn great money with this marketplace in the long run. According to their site, sellers on Shutterstock have made over $500 million worldwide!

Shutterstock allows you to keep your copyrights protected, so it’s up to you to set the rights on your photos. Shutterstock also gives credit to the image’s owners, which is a major plus that protects your ownership and markets your brand.

Once you become a site contributor, you begin earning money every time someone purchases and downloads your content. As a contributor you can make anywhere from 20% to 30% of whatever your image sells for, which Shutterstock pays out monthly.

Like Adobe Stock, Shutterstock doesn’t force you to use their marketplace exclusively. You might even consider selling on Adobe Stock and Shutterstock at the same time!

You can get started here to submit your photos through their platform.

4. Alamy

Alamy

Alamy is another a great platform on which to sell stock photos, because it doesn’t have any hard and fast rules.

The site may not have as many buyers as Shutterstock and Adobe Stock, but it’s still a great contender and another great option for revenue. Photographers can upload their photos to Alamy without licensing or any other copyrights issues. To date, Alamy has made $180 million in payouts to photographers.

Alamy’s rates are competitive, too. The marketplace pays photographers 50% of each sale if you exceed the $25,000 limit per year, 40% for each sale if your annual sales are less than $25,000 but higher than $250 and 20% for contributors whose annual sales are under $250, which is higher than some of the other competing platforms.

Give Alamy a try today! Sign up here to get started as a contributor.

5. Etsy

Etsy

Etsy is better known as a marketplace to buy and sell unique handmade goods, so you may not think of it when looking for places to sell stock photos. However, Etsy boasts over 30 million users and several different ways to sell your photos through their platform.

The great thing about Etsy is that they have a larger audience than most stock photo sites, and a demographic that is ready to purchase your images. Of course, you can sell digital images on Etsy, but you can also sell prints. So, if you’re looking to expand your photography business even more, Etsy is a great option!

Just remember when selling prints, you’ll have to factor in the cost of printing, packing and shipping.

Etsy also allows you to price your own photos, and the site gives you full control over how you display your photos to buyers. If you want full control over your photo selling but don’t want to make your own site from scratch, Etsy might be a great fit for you.

6. Fotomoto

Fotomoto

Fotomoto is not an online marketplace, but rather a widget that integrates with your website to help you sell photos online. After you add it to your site, the Fotomoto manages all the photo selling processes for you.

Like Etsy, Fotomoto allows you to offer digital photos, photo prints and even canvases to your site visitors. And, Fotomoto handles the packaging of your material photos so you don’t have to. It doesn’t get much easier if you plan to sell physical photo prints or canvases!

What’s really great about Fotomoto is that the widget itself is customizable. You can adjust the widget’s settings to display your own branding information, including your logo! That way, customers come to learn your brand and associate it with your images.

Whether your a hobbyist photographer, professional photographer or even graphic designer, Fotomoto has some great features that will work seamlessly with your existing WordPress site. Visit the widget website to learn more about its monthly, tiered plans and transaction fees.

7. Crestock

Crestock

Crestock can be a more passive way to earn money for your photography. Simply set up a free account on Crestock and upload your photos. Once the Crestock team evaluates your images, they’ll add them to you Crestock portfolio so that customers can purchase them.

You can add keywords and descriptions for each image, which increases your opportunities for approval by Crestock editors. And, those very same keywords and descriptions will make your photos easier to find amongst a sea of stock images on this site and others.

8. 500px

500px

500px is an online marketplace that helps you create a portfolio of your images and earn money. It is one of the best places to sell photos online.

This free site boasts a “Pulse algorithm” that increases your exposure by adding your new uploads to a Discovery page, which is viewed by thousands of visitors each day.

The site also provides analytics and tracking services so that you can see how your images fare compared to those by your competitors. Ever wondered how many clicks your images receive? What about how you rank in comparison to your peers? 500px can help you find answers to your burning questions.

Getting started on 500px is pretty simple. Just set up a free account and add your images. Then, wait and see what you turn up! Also, watch out for contests to help you earn more and gain additional exposure.

9. Snapped4u

Snapped4u

Snapped4u makes selling your event photos a piece of cake. If you shoot weddings, parties, engagements or other events, Snapped4u was designed to make your life easier and your pocket thicker.

With Snapped4u, you can make a gallery and upload images from an even you shot to that gallery. Then, you set the price of the photos and… that’s all!

From there, Snapped4u sells your images as jpeg files and emails them immediately to you buyers. Then, Snapped4u sends you the money you made via PayPal on the first of each month.

Because each Snapped4u seller has her own gallery page, customers who book you for multiple events can always find your images in the same place. And, you can give your personalized URL to anyone you think might want to purchase your photos.

Snapped4u gives you the biggest profit share on each sale. If the photos are sold on good prices, then Snapped4u will charge a commission.

10. PhotoShelter

Photoshelter

PhotoShelter is an online shop to sell and deliver prints to the clients. They allow you to set up your template for sharing the photos.

However, you need to buy the space on their platform to upload the photos. There are multiple plans for monthly and yearly options with different features.

11. TourPhotos

TourPhotos

TourPhotos is a hub for tourists and travel photographers across the globe. In fact, many travel agencies and tour companies use it to upload photos of their adventure trips for attendees and general public to purchase.

It is a great platform for travel photographers to sell their photos online to a like-minded audience. And, you’ll likely feel inspired by all of the beautiful photography that winds up on TourPhotos!

Conclusion

We hope this guide has helped you to find the best places to sell photos online and make money. Let us know in the comments which stock photo site or strategy you’re most excited to try.

You may also want to check out our other guides:

If you like this guide, then please follow us on Facebook and Twitter for more free photography tips and resources.

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Envira Gallery helps photographers create beautiful photo and video galleries in just a few clicks so that they can showcase and sell their work.

Comments

  1. Hi Envira Gallery,

    I saw you tweeting about make money online and I thought I’d check out your website. I really like it. Looks like Envira Gallery has come a long way!

    Building a mailing list like you are is so important too, I think people would really like to be signed up to what you have to share.

    Good job on the social buttons, social media is so powerful these days

    Good job with the Yoast plugin SEO is so important these days.

    1. Hi Jodie!

      You can upload the same photo to multiple agencies. However, you will need to read the requirements and terms for each site to be certain. In general, however, yes you can sell the same photo on several stock photo/agency sites.

  2. Unfortunately, when I typed in best or top place to sell photo’s online. There’s a vast difference in opinions. I want to know, how you come up with this list?

    1. The list reflects the best places based on several factors. So, not every site listed here will be the “best” for each type of photographer or each type of businessperson, but it is our hope by including a variety of high-quality sites here, at least one will appeal to every photographer’s specific needs. Hopefully, that helps!

  3. Iam kenyan citizen and interested in photo selling but I doubt if at all you accept from Africa?

  4. Good article.

    I went to Shuttersotck full of hope. I register, confirm my mail, and then ask me for my address which is was kind of weird to me, but I agreed. But then ask me for a picture of my passport or ID,… that was all my relationship with them.

    I know they may have many reason to request for that but they also are a private site and a passport or ID are really sensitive information. If I have a PayPal account or any other account for received the payment I think thus should be enough.

    The worst part is they ask for a fully detailed picture of the passport not only the name or the age.

    Finally what is bother the most is they don’t ask for that data in the first step. You have to register, then give your address and finally when probably most people don’t agree to that ask for your passport picture, when they allready have plenty of info about you. For the ones who agreed to that, hope they don’t request blood type or something like that in the steep 4.

    1. There is a reason – people try to post pictures that they have stolen or that infringe copyright – so they want to make sure you are who you say you are – if you get banned it is then less likely that you can just re-register. They are protecting themselves and your pictures too.

  5. Hi Waseem Abbas, such a great list of sites to sell the photograph for money. I hope this post will help many photographers to earn money also in online. Thanks for sharing this post with us.

  6. Hi guys, I am a single mom and working from home to earn money to support my baby girl. i mostly use YouTube to showcase my work in photography. My channel has started gaining some good audience and i am hoping to start earning enough from it to make it my permanent job. The only issue i have faced so far is how to get affiliate material for my videos and how to monetize my social media channels. Registering with affiliate networks is a tedious and difficult job. My offers were rejected many times before it got accepted. Now i have found a website name revglue which can monetize your website, blog or any social media channel so that you can earn money from it. They handle all the affiliate related work for me so i focus more on my social media promotion. you can also find details about them here at revglue(.)com/blog-detail/24-monetise-your-youtube-channels-and-reviews-with-revsocial . i have to pay a small amount of my revenue to them for there services but considering the alternative i say that i got the better deal. I had also worked with shutterstock in the past but YouTube pays you more for your effort.

    1. This comment was super helpful! How do you use YouTube exactly to display photography? Do you watermark it and then do a slideshow??

  7. Amazing list of resources.
    However PhotoShelter is too expensive for a photographer whose starting out. The same functionalities are offered by other platforms like Pixpa. I’ve had an e-commerce store for selling prints with Pixpa since almost a year, the sales are not regular but its an excellent source of side income.

  8. Thanks, great suggestions you have mentioned here. These ideas are really worth a lot for a website. I will definitely follow these tricks to my website and hope for better outcomes.

  9. Have any one got the money from any of the websites? How do we know that how many audience downloaded our photo? is there any way to track this information.

  10. Plenty of websites are offering money for uploading the images to their website as the pictures which have creativity getting more popularity and money according to that it is decided the price of the photo. Some of the trusted website in which you can trust blindly is Shutterstock as it is most trusted site from my view.

  11. Hi
    I read the article
    But still need your help
    I have so easy plant and nature’s photos
    And I need a start
    Will you help me to sell them

  12. After reading all the information,comments and responses, I like to give a try. Im interested. I’m new to this business. Where and how do I start? If I start how am I gonna be paid?
    Please need assistance.

  13. MY IMAGES ARE OFTEN ART IMAGES. I START WITH PHOTOGRAPHS THEN PROCESS THEM USING VARIOUS SOFTWARE SUCH AS GLIFTIC AND GET STUNNING RESULTS WHICH WOULD BE GREAT AS PICTURES ON WALLS, OR AS PATTERNS FOR FABRICS.
    WHICH PLATFORMS WOULD BE BEST FOR THESE KINDS OF IMAGES?
    ALSO WHERE IS DEVIANT ART PLACED IN THESE PLATFORMS. IT ALSO CAN BE A PLACE THAT ONE CAN SELL FROM AS A PHOTOGRAPHER.

    PLEASE – I REALLY WOULD VALUE SOME GUIDANCE ABOUT THIS
    THANK YOU

    1. Take a look at pixels.com or Fine Art America, same company. I’ve been using them for approx 10 yrs. $30 year fee, unlimited photos. You set the fee for each photo. They do everything else. Metal, Canvas, Cups, Sheets, Shower Curtains the list goes on. Little effort to use and it’s free for 30 days.

  14. I just joined Shutterstock and it is very particular. I submitted a photo of a sundog and it was rejected because the sun was out of focus!! Out of 103 submissions, 71 were rejected, some for dumb reasons such as needed to be in english, even tho it is, or the title didn’t match the photo, even tho it does. People in bleachers all need model releases, even if they are wearing sunglasses and are not identifiable. Just be aware if you go here. They said a dog needed a model release!!!

    1. With a site as reputable as shutterstock you can’t just go take a bunch of random pictures on your walk through the park and expect them to approve them. The pictures need to be of good quality and and have simple titles as described by their starter faq. As for people on bleachers and dogs needing model releases of course. Model releases are their to protect not only the person/animal being photographed but it also protects the “artist” and shutterstock. If ANYTHING should happen during or after the life of someone or something you photographed they could bring your stock image up in court and cost the company thousands of dollars and could easily bankrupt you. They’ve been doing this for 15+ years to my understanding. They know what they are doing because they’ve seen and done it all before.

  15. Agreed, the overall market is definitely saturated. That is why realistically it is only possible to make a living from photography if you can establish a clear niche, or point-of-difference.

    1. It’s true. The market is saturated and people take their own pictures these days. It’s difficult if not impossible to make a living or any money at all selling pictures. Most people will find it more profitable to do any minimum wage job. Unless you have a special niche and are extremely aggressive at marketing.

  16. I like to sell my photos online. I have good collection of nature. As I am new for this want to know how do I start, what is the best site and how do I get paid.

  17. I’ve sold images through Shutterstock, Twenty20, and Abobe Stock, and tried plenty of other sites including Alamy, EyeM, 123RF and Dreamstime

    Alamy are the most picky. What’s more, they literally ban you from uploading for weeks if you upload something they don’t like.

    Beware of Dreamstime – you cannot leave! You can delete all your content but they will continue to sell it. Very dubious practises.

    Twenty20 and EyeM have, by far, the easiest Model Release methods, and they pay out immediately rather than having to reach a threshold. They also have regular and free missions to encourage you to upload your best on topic images – more sites should do this.

    Shutterstock and Abobe – you don’t get much per image, so you have to have sold a lot before they pay out.

    123RF – They often don’t review your images for weeks. When you poke them about it, you suddenly find the last 20 were unacceptable. Very slap dash.

    In summary, Twenty20 and EyeM are recommended. Shutterstock and Adobe also recommended if you in it for the long game.

  18. Hello, I have pics of people that were at public areas.. Without their permission.. (Cultures like india,africa and more).
    Can I sell it? Or not?
    Thank you

  19. I have a numbered photograph by Nils Jorgensen with COA.
    Never framed it, stored in sleeve it came in. Where would be best to value it or possibly sell?

  20. I have a few alerts about some of these websites for people who are just starting:

    AdobeStock – Great site. Pays well. Does not accept editorial content.

    Shutterstock – Rarely will you get more than $0.25 for a download.

    Alamy – Extremely easy to upload. Good information form to fill out for each photo. The downside is that even after being a collaborator for over a year, I haven’t got one download yet. Even though on many of the other websites, I have multiple downloads. Doesn’t let you create collections.

    Crestock – I made an account over 6 months ago and uploaded 9 photos for review. They never got reviewed.

    500px – Seems like a good website. The only problem is that the watermark they put on the photos is very small. Anyone that wants their photos for web use, can get it directly from the site without paying. This also happens with Stocksy, which I really wanted to collaborate with, since they payout 50% to the photographers.

  21. Hi, I would like to major in art photography and trade which is the best market place for me? An based in Africa, Zambia to be specific.

  22. Great content, I’m in Africa(South Sudan to be specific). I don’t know if they allow us too, to sell photos online.

  23. your BLOG is literally the best community anywhere, i read it everyday, and i’m also so grateful i found it helped me and also to have a source of income, hope it helps some others!

  24. Very informative article. I would like to recommend to sell photo item on Shutterstock marketplace as a vendor. It’s a huge marketplace and there has many visitors. In the last 6 months, their visit was over 72 million. Really it is huge. Adobe Stock also good but personally I’m not interested in their marketing policy.

    Thank you very much such a great article.

  25. Hi, Very useful information – does it make a difference if the photos are taken by a normal, professional or even phone camera? Also, are there any rules/terms regarding the editing/effects of the photos uploaded?

    Last questions, which I am sure is very broad, what is the average price of photos taken by phone cameras?

  26. Hi Enviragallery ,

    Loves all that you shared.
    And Please have a look to this website which Can help others for more related information.

  27. I really enjoyed this pieces regarding online sales of photos. I will key in to the business – I have great passion in Photo making.

  28. I’m a hobby photographer shooting with a Nikon D5500. The only site I’ve tried to sell my work on is Shutterstock. Out of ~50 photos uploaded ~20 were approved. Some were rejected for being ‘overprocessed’ when I purposely post processed them for my desired effect. So if you’re a Pink Floyd fan Shutterstock is probably not going to be good for you. Others were rejected for ‘subject is not in focus’. These were vast landscape photographs, where it’s impossible to have everything in perfect focus. Some of these I resubmitted and the new reviewer approved them. This proves inconsistencies in their review process. It just depends on what employee reviews your work and what mood they were in at that time.

    Out of the 20 photos that were approved, I have a total of 5 sales over almost 2 years, paid out at $0.25 each. Not counting the time and expenses of going out to take these photos (I don’t count these expenses because I’m not a pro and I was just doing something that I enjoy) I spent 4-5 hours over the course of several days to register, process my photos, upload my material, and resubmit. Now almost 2 years later I have $1.25 from my efforts. Since uploading on Shutterstock, I’ve learned that the older your content gets the lower it goes on search results. Eventually nobody will ever see your work here, unless you keep uploading (current work will only be seen). So much for passive income.
    My advice is don’t waste your time with Shutterstock unless you have time and are willing to put energy into constantly uploading, resubmitting, and doing your own marketing, and in the end they will make 10x more than you from your work. If you’re willing to do all that you might as well start your own web site.

    Fun fact, making 2.5 sales per year at $0.25 per sale, I will have to wait 2,000 years to make minimum wage for the photos I’ve had accepted at Shutterstock. Oh and you have to hit $75 before you can cash out, so maybe in 100 years I’ll get my $75 if I haven’t been dead for 60 years (which is likely). This is probably what they’re counting on for 95% of their content providers.

    Then if I want to cover my field session time and expenses and sales are steady, I’ll be in the black in about 200,000 years. Cheers!

  29. I’m trying to sell my photos with lot many website but most of them doesn’t approve your photo, don’t know why so it takes huge time and waste of effort and money.

  30. i love these sites they really helped me a lot on bettering my photos
    i tried a lot of photo selling websites and none really picked my interest but these sites here so thank you

  31. Good guide lines. I am a journalist and have hundreds of photos of Indan culture. Some of them were shut by oppo phone. Shall we make money with these images.

  32. Seems Kenyans are many here so let me also comment. You forgot free sites like pixabay, good for promoting yourself as photographer and maybe get someone serious clients off of it who are willing to engage you in a big project.

  33. Shutterstock on this list? What a joke! They lowered the photographer revenue to 10c per photo sale. Who wants to sell their photos for 10c?

  34. I want to sell some of photo of the nature.
    Honestly, I am not a professional. If you liked you can buy.I want just suggest you that,please test some of my photo.🤗

  35. Interesting article and subject!
    Making money with photography sounds like the stuff of dreams, doesn’t it? Especially if you’ve loved picking up a camera and getting creative for as long as you can remember.

    You’d get to indulge in one of your true passions on a daily basis, finely tune your skills, learn more about humans and what makes them tick, create beautiful pieces of art and still manage to pay your bills at the same time.

    You could wave goodbye to your unfulfilling 9-5, stop having to answer to your boss and start living life on your own terms.

    It’s not going to be easy, of course.

    Hope we can all make some more money online and especially with photography.

    Cheers!

    Franklin

  36. Thank you so much for this post. I am really passionate about photography and travel. I had the same question ”How do I sell my photos online?”. I wish I had found this article earlier. It was really an eye-opener.

    I hope it helps someone and thank you for another great article 🙂

  37. Having your own website is the best solution for me if you want to make money with photography ! Be your own BOSS… and sale your photos.

  38. Completely agree with R’s comment above. Shutterstock should not be on this list!! Their new lowered fee structure of paying photographers 10c per photo sale is an absolute insult.

    Don’t waste your time with Shutterstock!

  39. Thank you very much for the recommendations. I have used several of them and some of them count more impressions, others pay better, in short each one has its own.

  40. before launching you must first know ho buy the images.
    Usually it is newspapers and professionals in advertising and the packaging industry.
    they need generally illustrations to define a commercial product.
    for example a baby diaper maker needs images that target moms. it is the mother who buy does not the dad
    cooking dishes if you are a good cook.

  41. It’s really a great and helpful piece off info. I am glad that youu simply shared this
    useful info with us. Please keep us informed like this. Thaank you for sharing.

  42. Thanks for the wonderful article. I have been try making my passive income like create blogs, affiliate marketing, youtube content creator. It take lots of time and research, and hard work.

  43. I strive to post only unique content on my site, and this applies not only to articles, but also to photographs. For a long time I could not figure out where to get high-quality photos for my site. I took some photos myself, but I have no special skills and a professional camera. Your article helped me figure out my problem. Thank you for helping me make my site better!

  44. Regarding Alamy the article is outdated. From July 2021 Alamy has a new pricing policy for contributors, cutting down the fee to 20 % for all contributors whose annual sale does not reach US$250. The fee for contributors who fall into the annual sales range from US$250 to US$25,000 is 40 % (since 2019), not 50 %. The fee of 50 % is only for contributors who exceed the US$25,000 limit.

  45. Personally, I believe that giving control to the third-party website is not a good strategy and staying in control of your price and transactions is ultimately a better strategy.

  46. Howdy! I use and love Envira Gallery Pro and wanted to pass along another great place to sell your photos: Photo Art Pavilion

    I just started with them at the end of November and have sold 5 photos so far. They handle everything once you upload your images – packing, shipping, matting, frames and so on. And take a look at my photos 🙂

  47. Shutterstock was a waste of time. Also, making only 20 – 30% on my work that costs them very little to keep on site, its not worth it.

  48. Hello,
    I have been wanting to make people computer\phone backgrounds\wallpapers..
    though idk where to post them.. if anyone would like to let me know where I can post these things please let me know..

  49. * How do you feel about using things Instagram to promote your photos? Is it a good way to get brand exposure, or is it a bad idea because of the possibility of theft??

  50. If you really want to be much closer to someone just keep distance to him or her because that this type of feeling harmful for you and they distroy to you inside.🤯

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