

Senior year goes fast. One day you’re signing permission slips. The next, you’re watching your kid walk across a stage.
Senior portraits are how you hold onto this chapter. And choosing the right photographer matters more than most parents realize, especially before they’ve been through it.
This guide gives you the questions to ask, the red flags to watch for, and the details that separate a forgettable experience from one your family will talk about for years.
Not all photographers are the same, and senior portrait photography is its own specialty.
A wedding photographer is skilled at capturing spontaneous emotion in fast-moving environments. A newborn photographer works with tiny subjects in controlled studio light. A senior photographer does something different. They work with teenagers who are often nervous, self-conscious, and convinced they are not photogenic.
Getting natural, confident images from a 17-year-old requires a specific skill set: the ability to direct poses clearly, ease tension without being performative, and move through multiple outfits and locations while keeping the session feeling relaxed.
When you are comparing photographers, ask directly: how many senior sessions do you shoot per year? A specialist will have a number that reflects consistent focus. Someone who photographs everything from babies to corporate headshots may not have the experience to guide your senior through an awkward moment on camera.
Photographers handle this very differently, and it matters more than most parents expect going in.
Some photographers are prints-only. You get physical products and nothing else. No files, no digital copies, no printing on your own. Some give you a gallery link and leave you to figure out the rest. You download the images yourself, find a place to print, and hope the quality holds up. Some sell digitals as an add-on, priced separately from the session. Others include a set number of images in their packages with a print release. A smaller group does a full in-person reveal and ordering experience, where you see everything together and a real human helps you decide what to do with the images.
There is no universally wrong model, but you need to know exactly what you are getting before you write a check. Ask specifically:
How many edited images are included? Are digital files high-resolution and ready for print? Can we print anywhere, or are we limited to your print lab?
At MBP, digital files are included in select collections and come with a full print release. Rather than dropping a gallery link and walking away, Megan schedules your Gallery Reveal and Purchasing appointment at the studio about two weeks after your session. That’s when you see your images for the first time, select your favorites together, design your products, and place your order. She walks you through the whole thing.
This is the question most parents forget to ask, and it is one of the most important.
Your senior will stress about what to wear. That is not a prediction, it is a pattern. And if they show up to their session in the wrong outfits, no amount of great lighting fixes it.
Ask the photographer: do you provide wardrobe guidance before the session? What does that look like?
A strong answer will describe a specific process. A weak answer is “I suggest neutral colors and layers.” That is advice you could find in a Google search.
At MBP, wardrobe prep is built into the process. Before your session, Megan asks your senior to send photos of their planned outfits so she can review them ahead of time and make any suggestions before the day arrives. No showing up and realizing something doesn’t work on camera. Every senior also receives a detailed prep guide, and MBP’s What to Wear Styling Guide is available to walk you through colors, combinations, and what actually photographs well. The goal is for your senior to show up feeling confident and prepared, not scrambling the night before.
Most teenagers have never been in front of a professional camera. They freeze. They laugh nervously. They say “I don’t know what to do with my hands” and mean it.
A skilled senior photographer coaches the whole session from start to finish. They do not point a camera and wait for something to happen. They direct posing, adjust body positioning, and know how to break tension so the expression that follows looks genuine.
Ask the photographer: how do you guide someone who is uncomfortable on camera?
Listen for specific language. “I coach every pose step-by-step so your senior never has to guess” is a specific answer. “I just try to make it fun” is not.
Some packages are session-only. The photographer shoots, sends a gallery link, and you are on your own. Others include a fuller experience with pre-session prep, professional hair and makeup, and an in-person appointment after.
Neither is inherently wrong, but they are very different products at very different investment levels. Know what you are comparing before you compare prices.
Here is what a full-service experience looks like at MBP:
A welcome packet mailed after booking so your senior knows exactly what to expect, plus access to the MBP Elite Suite which covers everything they need to prepare: a personalized prep guide and the What to Wear Styling Guide so outfits are planned and camera-ready before the day arrives. Professional hair and makeup by a licensed artist included in the session, for both guys and girls. Up to 3 hours of session time with multiple locations and 3 to 5 outfit changes, all planned with your senior ahead of time. Continuous on-session posing coaching so your senior is never standing there unsure what to do. A fun interview at the end of the session. An in-person Gallery Reveal and Purchasing appointment to select images, design products, and place your order together, all backed by a lifetime guarantee on every product.

When you know what a full experience includes, it becomes easier to evaluate whether a lower-priced session is actually a better value, or just a shorter one.
Digital files are convenient. But the images that actually end up on your wall come from a print order, and not all print labs are equal.
A photographer who only delivers digital files is not a complete service provider. Ask whether they offer professional print products: albums, image boxes, framed wall art, mounted storyboards, gift prints, and wallets.
A photographer who provides an in-person ordering experience is guiding you through those choices so you do not have to figure it out alone. At MBP, every product is ordered through professional print labs and backed by a lifetime guarantee.

Every photographer edits differently. Some favor bright, airy, sun-washed tones. Others prefer bold, rich color with strong contrast. Some shoot documentary-style, moving and unposed. Others work in a structured, clearly directed style.
There is no objectively correct look. But there is a wrong fit.
If your senior is bold, outgoing, and wants photos that feel high-impact, they will be disappointed by a light, soft, whimsical style. If your senior is reserved and wants something timeless and natural, a heavily dramatic, high-contrast edit might not feel like them.
MBP’s editing style is bold and true to color, hand-edited so your senior still looks like themselves, just on their best day. Not over-processed. Not AI-smoothed.
Before booking any photographer, look at their full portfolio, not just their three best images. Look for consistency. Does the style hold across different seniors? Does the editing feel like a point of view, or does it feel random?
Then ask your senior: do these look like someone I want to look like? That answer matters more than yours.
This section is for parents who have a family friend with a nice camera in the running.
Photography equipment has become more accessible. That is genuinely good. But equipment is not the same as skill, and skill is not the same as a professional workflow.
A licensed, professional photographer carries liability insurance. They have a signed contract that protects you both. They have a consistent editing style, a reliable delivery timeline, and a process that has been tested across dozens or hundreds of senior sessions.
If something goes wrong, files are corrupted, images are not what you expected, or the timeline slips dramatically, a professional has recourse and accountability built into their business. A favor does not.
Senior portraits are not a correctable situation. You get one spring of your senior year. If the images do not deliver, there is no do-over.
The investment difference between a friend with a camera and a specialist is real. So is the risk.
Vague pricing without any transparency about what is included. If you cannot get a clear answer about what the base investment covers, that is a sign of a confusing client experience ahead.
No defined process. If the photographer cannot describe clearly what happens from inquiry to image delivery, they are likely figuring it out as they go.
Portfolio inconsistency. A wide variation in editing style across their portfolio suggests they are still developing their eye or shooting in many different genres.
No contract. Never book without a signed agreement that outlines what is included, the delivery timeline, and what happens if something goes wrong.
Pressure to book immediately. Scarcity is real in senior photography because session dates genuinely do fill. But a professional never pressures you in a way that prevents you from asking good questions first.

Your senior will remember this experience.
Not just the photos. The whole thing. How they felt walking in. Whether they felt guided or left to figure it out. Whether the photographer made them feel comfortable or awkward. Whether the finished images looked like them on their best day or like someone else entirely.
The right photographer delivers an experience your senior will talk about, and a gallery you will still be pulling up years from now.
Take your time choosing. Ask the questions. Look at the full body of work.
When you find the right fit, you will know.
Megan Bowers Photography is a luxury senior portrait studio in Lawrence, Kansas, currently booking Class of 2027. MBP sessions include professional hair and makeup by a licensed artist, a personalized wardrobe and prep guide, up to 3 hours of session time with multiple locations and outfit changes, continuous on-set posing coaching, and an in-person Gallery Reveal and Purchasing appointment. Inquire through the link above to check availability.
I’m so glad you’re here. I’m Megan, the photographer behind Megan Bowers Photography, and I specialize in high school senior portraits. I love senior photos because the energy is so fun, and I get to capture what makes you you. I’ll guide you through the whole process, from outfits and locations to posing on session day, so you can relax and actually enjoy it. Thanks for stopping by the blog. I’m really happy you’re here.
Learn More
10 Tips to Choose Your senior Photographer
The quickest way to regret senior photos is hiring the wrong photographer. I made this free guide with 10 tips to help you avoid the red flags, ask the right questions, and choose someone you actually trust.