Guide

Family Photo Pricing Guide: Credits, Retries, and Refund Logic

Understand how FamilyGen credits work, what retries cost, when 2K or 4K makes sense, and how failed generations are refunded.

Updated 2026-03-06

Why credit pricing needs plain-language explanation

Credit systems are easy to misunderstand when a site only shows package sizes and a purchase button. Users want to know what one generation costs, what happens if they retry, whether quality changes the credit burn, and what refund rule applies if something fails. If those answers are not obvious, pricing feels risky.

FamilyGen already has the raw information in the product and pricing UI. The SEO opportunity is to convert that information into plain-language guidance so both users and search engines can understand the commercial model without guesswork.

How to think about cost per finished image

The meaningful question is not how many credits come in a pack. It is how many successful, useful results you can reasonably expect from that pack. A user testing sources at 2K may prefer a lower-cost path at the start, while a user who already knows the source pair is strong may move faster to 4K output.

This framing helps users compare packs based on their actual workflow rather than on abstract bundle size. It also gives the pricing page more commercial depth, which improves its SEO usefulness.

Retries and refinements should be part of the explanation

People rarely buy a creative AI tool expecting a perfect first result every time. They expect a process. That means pricing pages and guides should explain how retries and refinements fit into the credit model, not treat them as an edge case.

FamilyGen should state that 2K is the lower-cost option for exploration, 4K is the premium choice for final export, and retries are best used once the input quality is already sound. That creates a fairer expectation and a stronger commercial story.

Refund clarity builds trust

A user does not only evaluate price. They also evaluate downside. If a generation fails because of a system issue, the corresponding credits should be returned automatically and that rule should be easy to find from both the pricing page and the FAQ. Clear refund logic is part of conversion, retention, and SEO trust at the same time.

This is especially important for branded search. When someone searches for FamilyGen pricing or refund policy, the site should have a page that answers the question directly instead of forcing users to infer the answer from product UI fragments.