What do your
palm lines say?
Upload a photo of your hand. AI generates a designed palm reading guide — heart line, head line, life line, fate line — laid out like an editorial magazine spread.
Read my palmFree trial · ~$0.06 per reading · 8 languages · 4 visual styles
Real results from the trend
These are the actual outputs from the viral ChatGPT Images 2.0 palm prompt — clean editorial reading sheets that look like premium infographics. Our tool generates the same thing, with style and language options layered on top.
Examples from the original Instagram trend (@chatgptricks, 5.5K likes). Your hand produces a unique reading.
Read your palm
Four picks. One designed reading. About 30 seconds.
Upload a clear photo of your hand
Pick a visual style
What should the reading focus on?
Language of the reading
Sign in, upload a hand photo, pick your settings to enable.
How it works
The original trend was a hand-crafted prompt by Linus Ekenstam on X. We turned it into a one-tap tool — same image-edit model, with style and language layered on.
Identity-preserving image edit
Powered by nano-banana-2 (Google's image-edit model) or gpt-image-2 (OpenAI). Both keep the structure of your actual hand intact while building a designed sheet around it.
Designed prompt engineering
The prompt names every section ("Palm Lines Map", "Major Lines", "What This Means For You"), specifies the visual style, and asks for an expensive-looking editorial layout. You'd get a flat description otherwise.
No subscription
Pay-as-you-go through AI Pass — about $0.06 per reading. One wallet for OpenAI, Google, Anthropic and Fal.
Questions
What is this Palm Reading tool?▾
An AI photo-to-design tool that takes a clear photo of your hand and generates a polished palm reading guide — labeled palm lines, personality traits, strengths, and life guidance, all laid out like an editorial design sheet. Based on the viral ChatGPT Images 2.0 palm prompt shared by Linus Ekenstam on X in April 2026.
Is this an actual palm reading?▾
Treat it as entertainment. Palmistry is an interpretive tradition, not a science — the AI reads the visible lines and structure of your hand and writes plausible, layout-friendly descriptions. It's not predictive; it's a beautifully designed mirror that's fun to share.
What styles can I pick?▾
Four visual aesthetics: Minimalist (clean black-on-white editorial, the original Linus look), Mystical (deep purple with gold celestial accents), Vintage Parchment (sepia scroll, occult library feel), and Modern Infographic (bold color blocks, magazine layout). All four use the same underlying model — the prompt changes the aesthetic.
Which language can I get it in?▾
English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Arabic, Persian (Farsi), and Chinese. The full reading — every label, description, and personality trait — gets written in the chosen language. Useful for sharing with family or friends in their own language.
How much does it cost?▾
Pay-as-you-go through AI Pass — typically under $0.06 per reading. No subscription, no signup form beyond a Google or email login. New accounts get a small free credit to try it.
What's the best photo to upload?▾
Open your dominant hand, palm fully facing the camera, fingers slightly spread, natural daylight if possible. Avoid harsh shadows or extreme angles. The clearer the lines, the more interesting and accurate-feeling the reading.
Is my hand photo stored — what about the biometric privacy concerns?▾
Fair concern — there's been a real conversation on X about people uploading high-res hand photos to AI models. Here's the honest version: your photo is sent to the AI model (Fal-routed gpt-image-2 or nano-banana-2) for the seconds it takes to generate the reading, then discarded. AI Pass doesn't keep it on our servers and we don't train on it. If you want extra peace of mind, crop the photo tightly around just the palm before uploading — the AI doesn't need fingerprints or wrist context to read your lines.
Which model should I pick?▾
Default is gpt-image-2 — that's the model Linus Ekenstam used for the original viral prompt, and it's the strongest at text-heavy designed layouts (which is what a palm reading guide is). nano-banana-2 is the alternative if you want sharper preservation of the hand itself; sometimes useful for the Minimalist style.
Ready to read your lines?
Open your dominant hand. Snap a clear photo. Pick your vibe.
Read my palm 🪬