How to capture a clear photo that passes the first time
A short list of tips that dramatically improve your chance of being verified on the first try.
Written By Catherine Weir
Last updated About 3 hours ago
The quality of your ID photo and selfie is the single biggest factor in whether verification passes on the first try. Follow these tips and you'll usually be done in under 2 minutes.
Use your phone camera, not a webcam
Mobile cameras take sharper, cleaner photos than most webcams. If you start the process on your computer, use the option to send a link to your phone and finish there. Most customers do this.
For your ID photo
Lay the ID flat on a dark, solid surface โ a wooden desk, a dark table, or a book works well. Avoid tablecloths and busy patterns.
Don't hold the ID in your hand โ your fingers can accidentally cover important parts of the card
Use natural light if possible โ next to a window is ideal. Avoid direct overhead lights that create shadows
Hold your phone directly above the ID, not at an angle โ the image should capture the whole card with a bit of border around it
Make sure all four corners are visible
Watch for glare โ if a light is reflecting off the card's surface, move or angle the card slightly to eliminate it
For your selfie
Face the light, not away from it โ don't have a bright window behind you
Remove sunglasses, hats, and masks โ your full face needs to be visible
Look directly at the camera
Keep a neutral expression โ no need to pose
If you wear glasses, it's usually fine, but if verification fails, try once without them
Most common reasons a photo gets rejected
Image is too blurry (hold still, let the camera focus)
Too dark or too bright (adjust lighting)
Glare covers text on the ID
Part of the ID is cut off at the edge of the frame
ID is expired
Fingers or objects partially covering the ID
If it fails the first time
Don't worry โ you can retry. The system will usually tell you exactly what went wrong (e.g., "image too dark" or "please try a different document"). Fix the specific issue and try again. Most first-time failures pass on the second or third attempt.