Hydrocyanines are a class of commonly used reactive oxygen species (ROS) fluorescent imaging probes, which can image ROS in cell culture, organ culture, and in vivo. However, despite their widespread use, hydrocyanines have several drawbacks that limit their effectiveness, such as a high rate of auto-oxidation, a small Stokes shift, and poor water solubility. In addition, the hydrocyanines oxidize into cyanine dyes, which themselves decompose in the presence of ROS, and this further lowers their sensitivity towards detecting ROS. In this report, we present a new hydrocyanine analog, termed as thiophene-bridged hydrocyanine (TBHC), which has its double bonds replaced with a bisthiophene. TBHC is 8.06-fold more stable to auto-oxidation than the hydrocyanine hydro-Cy5 and is significantly better at imaging ROS in cell culture.