ComparisonPublished July 2, 2026By Thibault Mathian

The 7 Best Virtual Try-On Plugins for WooCommerce (2026)

A practical comparison of virtual try-on plugins that actually work with WooCommerce in 2026: technology, product categories, pricing, and how to choose for your store.

Table of contents

Virtual Try-On Finally Arrives on WooCommerce

For years, virtual try-on (VTO) was a Shopify story. The biggest apps, the case studies, the app-store category: all of it lived on one platform, while WooCommerce merchants (who run a huge share of the world's online stores) were left with enterprise sales calls or nothing.

That changed in 2025 and 2026. Generative AI collapsed the cost of realistic try-on, and a real plugin ecosystem is now forming around WooCommerce. The catch: quality varies enormously, from polished AI engines to thin wrappers around a raw API key.

A merchant's desk with a WooCommerce product page on the laptop and the AI try-on result on a phone
A merchant's desk with a WooCommerce product page on the laptop and the AI try-on result on a phone

We compared the solutions that genuinely work with WooCommerce today. For each one: how it integrates, what products it covers, what the technology really is, and what it costs when the vendor says so publicly.


How We Compared

  • Real WooCommerce support. A plugin or documented integration, not "works with any website" marketing. Notable vendors like Fittingbox and Perfect Corp offer strong try-on tech but no self-serve WooCommerce path, so they are not in this list.
  • Technology. Generative AI (renders the product on the shopper's real photo), AR overlays (live camera), or 3D configurators. They produce very different results depending on the product category.
  • Setup burden. Some tools work from your existing product photos; others need specific photo angles or 3D models for every SKU.
  • Pricing transparency. We note the public price when one exists, and say so when it doesn't.

1. Genlook: Generative AI Try-On Built for Fashion

Genlook brings the same generative AI try-on engine used on Shopify to WooCommerce, through a WordPress plugin connected to Genlook's AI backend.

  • Integration: install the plugin, connect your store, enable products from the dashboard. The try-on button appears on your product pages.
  • Categories: apparel, swimwear, eyewear, wigs, jewelry, shoes, and more.
  • Technology: generative AI. The shopper uploads one photo (a mirror selfie works) and sees the actual product rendered on their own body in seconds, in the browser.
  • Setup burden: none beyond enabling products. It works from the product photos already on your store: no 3D models, no special photo angles.
  • Best for: fashion and accessory stores that want photorealistic results with minimal setup.

Get started here; the same account also covers stores on other platforms.

2. Zakeke: Product Customizer with a Try-On Module

Zakeke is primarily a product customization platform (3D configuration, personalization, print-on-demand) that includes an AR/AI try-on module.

  • Integration: an official plugin on wordpress.org, installed like any WooCommerce extension.
  • Technology: 3D configurator plus AR try-on.
  • Pricing: public and self-serve, starting around $29.90/month with a 14-day trial. Try-on-specific tiers cost more.
  • Strength / limit: transparent pricing and a real wordpress.org listing, but try-on is a secondary feature of a customization product, not the core focus.
  • Best for: stores that mainly want product personalization and take try-on as a bonus.

3. Camweara: Jewelry Try-On Specialist

Camweara focuses on jewelry (rings, necklaces, earrings) plus watches and eyewear, and integrates with WooCommerce alongside Shopify and Magento.

  • Technology: photo-based try-on with optional 3D models; the vendor claims high rendering accuracy and cites strong conversion lifts from jewelry clients.
  • Pricing: vendor marketing cites plans from around $80/month, billed yearly.
  • Strength / limit: deep jewelry specialization, but you must supply product photos in specific formats and angles for each item, which adds real setup work on large catalogs.
  • Best for: jewelry stores willing to invest setup time per SKU.

4. Auglio: AR Mirror for Eyewear, Cosmetics and Wigs

Auglio offers a dedicated WooCommerce plugin: you install it, paste your Auglio API key, and its "magic mirror" runs on your product pages.

  • Technology: live AR (camera-based) with face-shape detection.
  • Categories: eyewear, cosmetics, jewelry, wigs and headwear.
  • Pricing: not published; demo and sales-led.
  • Strength / limit: broad AR category coverage with a purpose-built Woo plugin, but AR overlays look less realistic than generative AI for soft products like hair and clothing, and you cannot see a price without talking to sales.
  • Best for: eyewear and beauty stores that specifically want a live camera mirror.

5. Banuba: Widest AR Category Range

Banuba markets a no-code WooCommerce try-on showroom covering makeup, glasses, contact lenses, jewelry, nail polish, and hair color.

  • Technology: real-time AR face tracking with AI product digitization.
  • Pricing: not published; depends on categories, usage, and SKU volume.
  • Strength / limit: the widest category spread of any single AR vendor, but pricing is opaque and the tech is face-focused AR, not full-body generative try-on, so apparel is not its game.
  • Best for: beauty-first stores with many face-adjacent SKUs.

6. SpecFit: Free Eyewear Try-On from the Plugin Directory

SpecFit is a wordpress.org plugin dedicated to glasses and sunglasses, with a free tier and the strongest verified traction among the directory's pure try-on plugins (60+ active installs, 4.5 stars).

  • Technology: camera-based try-on with a 3D pipeline.
  • Strength / limit: genuinely free to start and fully self-serve, but eyewear only, and reviewers report premium features get expensive.
  • Best for: small optical stores testing try-on for the first time at zero cost.

7. Budget Gemini Wrappers: TryonX and W7S

A new wave of low-cost plugins wires Google's Gemini image model directly into WooCommerce:

  • TryonX (wordpress.org, free): apparel-only, bring-your-own Gemini API key, so you pay Google per generation and manage the key yourself.

  • W7S Virtual Try-On (official WooCommerce marketplace, about €35/year): the same Gemini-blending idea sold as a subscription, with very broad category claims.

  • Strength / limit: the cheapest way to experiment, but you get a raw model call with no fashion-specific tuning, no result curation, no dashboard analytics, and quality that varies shot to shot.

  • Best for: hobby stores that want to play with the technology before committing.


Side-by-Side Comparison

PluginTechnologyCategoriesWooCommerce pathPublic pricing
GenlookGenerative AI (one shopper photo)Apparel, swimwear, eyewear, wigs, jewelry, shoesWordPress plugin + dashboardGet started free
Zakeke3D configurator + ARGeneral products, apparelwordpress.org pluginFrom ~$29.90/mo
CamwearaPhoto-based + 3DJewelry, watches, eyewearDocumented integrationFrom ~$80/mo
AuglioLive AR mirrorEyewear, cosmetics, jewelry, wigsDedicated Woo pluginNot published
BanubaReal-time ARMakeup, glasses, lenses, jewelry, nails, hairNo-code showroomNot published
SpecFitCamera + 3DEyewear onlywordpress.org pluginFree tier
TryonX / W7SRaw Gemini callsApparel (TryonX), broad claims (W7S)wordpress.org / Woo marketplaceFree + API costs / ~€35/yr

How to Choose

  • Fashion, swimwear, or wig store: you need full-body generative AI, not face AR. That narrows the field to Genlook and the Gemini wrappers, and the wrappers trade quality and analytics for price.
  • Jewelry store: Camweara if you can invest per-SKU setup; Genlook if you want to work from your existing photos.
  • Optical store: SpecFit to test for free, Auglio or Fittingbox-class AR for a live mirror, Genlook for photorealistic still results.
  • Beauty store: Banuba's AR range fits face-adjacent products better than any generative tool today.

The Bottom Line

WooCommerce merchants no longer have to watch virtual try-on from the sidelines. The ecosystem is young and uneven, but the leading options are real, and the gap between "raw API wrapper" and "production-ready try-on" is where your choice matters.

If you sell fashion, start where the technology is strongest: create your Genlook account, install the WordPress plugin, and have photorealistic try-on live on your WooCommerce product pages today.

FAQ

Questions, answered.

Does virtual try-on work on WooCommerce?

Yes. Several solutions now support WooCommerce directly, from generative AI engines like Genlook (WordPress plugin plus AI backend) to AR mirrors like Auglio and free directory plugins like SpecFit. Quality and category coverage vary widely between them.

What is the best virtual try-on plugin for a WooCommerce clothing store?

For apparel you need full-body generative AI rather than face-focused AR. Genlook renders the actual garment on a photo the shopper uploads, works from your existing product images, and installs through a WordPress plugin connected to your Genlook account.

Are there free virtual try-on plugins for WooCommerce?

Yes, with trade-offs. SpecFit has a free tier for eyewear, and TryonX is free but requires your own paid Google Gemini API key and offers no fashion-specific tuning. Free options are good for experiments, less so for production stores.

Do I need 3D models of my products?

Not with generative AI tools: Genlook and the Gemini-based plugins work from standard product photos. AR and 3D-configurator tools (Zakeke, Camweara's 3D mode, eyewear mirrors) may require 3D assets or specific photo angles per product.

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