7 Best AI Interior Design Tools in 2026 (Tested & Compared)

A year ago, "AI interior design" mostly meant blurry rooms with melted furniture and doorways that led nowhere. In 2026 that has changed. The best tools now take a single phone photo of your actual room and hand back a photorealistic redesign in under a minute, keeping your windows, ceiling height and floor plan intact. That makes them genuinely useful for homeowners deciding on a paint color, DIY decorators planning a refresh, or anyone staging a space to sell.

The catch: the market is crowded and the quality gap is wide. Some tools are fast but give you ten cookie-cutter styles. Others look great but lock the good features behind steep subscriptions. And a couple of the "AI" services in your search results are actually human design firms wearing a tech coat. I put the leading options through the same test — the same living room photo, the same brief ("warm modern with a reading nook") — and compared results, control, speed and price. Here's how they stack up.


A striking modern living room with floor-to-ceiling windows, oak floors and layered neutral tones

Quick comparison table

Tool

Best for

Styles

Standout feature

Starting price

 

GenRoom

Best all-rounder

50+

Text-based AI Editor + 4K output

Free credits, then $6.99

Interior AI

Realtors & virtual staging

~20

Strong staging & "restyle" modes

Free tier + paid plans

ReimagineHome

Real-estate teams

~15

Masking to redesign part of a room

Free tier + paid plans

HomeDesigns AI

Quick idea browsing

~15

Interior + exterior + garden in one

Free tier + paid plans

Spacely AI

Designers & teams

~15

Moodboards & commercial spaces

Free tier + paid plans

Havenly

Hands-off, real designer

Unlimited (human)

Matched with a live designer

~$79+ per room

Decorilla

Full high-end projects

Unlimited (human)

Multiple 3D concepts + shopping list

~$449+ per room

1. GenRoom — best all-rounder

GenRoom is the tool I'd hand to a friend who just wants a great result without a learning curve. You upload a photo of your room, pick from more than 50 styles — most rivals offer 10 to 20 — and get a photorealistic redesign in about 30 seconds. In my test it kept the window placement and room proportions honest, which is exactly where cheaper tools fall apart.

Two things push it ahead of the pack. First, the built-in AI Editor: instead of re-rolling the whole image and hoping, you refine the result with plain text — "make the sofa deep green," "add a floor lamp by the window," "warmer lighting." That iterative control is rare and it's the single feature I missed most on other tools. Second, it outputs in 4K, with a Pro Model for sharper materials, support for up to five reference photos, and a private-generation option. It also isn't limited to interiors — it handles facades, yards and virtual staging too. If you want to try it, it's a well-rounded AI interior design tool with free starter credits.

Pros: Most styles of any tool here; genuine text-based editing; 4K output; fast; interiors, exteriors and staging in one place; cheapest entry point.

Cons: Credit-based rather than unlimited, so very heavy users will burn through a starter pack; it's a solo-creator tool, not a team workspace.

Price: Free starter credits, then one-time packs — Start $6.99, Basic $19.99, Pro $29.99.


GenRoom AI interior design tool homepage


GenRoom — best all-rounder

Before-and-after of the same living room: bare empty room on the left, fully styled modern room on the right

2. Interior AI — strong for staging and realtors

Interior AI (interiorai.com) was one of the first tools to go viral, and it's still a solid pick, especially for property listings. Its virtual-staging and "restyle" modes are dependable, and it's good at furnishing an empty room convincingly. The interface is straightforward, and results tend to look tidy rather than chaotic.

Where it lags is creative range and control. The style list is narrower than GenRoom's, and refining a result means regenerating rather than nudging with text. The free tier also watermarks and limits output, so you'll hit the paywall quickly if you're doing more than a couple of rooms.

Pros: Reliable virtual staging; clean, realistic furnishing; recognizable, trusted brand.

Cons: Fewer styles; limited fine-tuning; the free tier is restrictive.

Price: Free tier to preview; paid plans for full-resolution, watermark-free output.

3. ReimagineHome — precise, room-by-room control

ReimagineHome (reimaginehome.ai) leans toward the real-estate and prop-tech crowd. Its best trick is masking: you can select just the sofa, or just the walls, and redesign that element while leaving the rest of the room untouched. That's genuinely useful when you love your layout but want to test one change.

The trade-off is that the workflow is fiddlier than a one-click tool, and for casual users it can feel like more steps than the result warrants. Style variety is middle-of-the-road, and the most useful volume features sit on paid tiers aimed at businesses.

Pros: Fine-grained, element-level editing; good for staging and renovation mockups; batch-friendly for teams.

Cons: Steeper learning curve; fewer styles; oriented toward pros more than weekend decorators.

Price: Free tier + paid plans that scale with volume.

4. HomeDesigns AI — a fast idea generator

HomeDesigns AI (homedesigns.ai) is a comfortable middle option. It covers interiors, exteriors and gardens, so you can test a living-room refresh and a curb-appeal makeover in the same session. It's quick and beginner-friendly, and a good way to browse directions before committing.

Quality is decent but not the sharpest here — fine details and lighting can look a touch generic next to the top performers, and there's no true text-editing loop to perfect a shot. Think of it as an idea machine rather than a finishing tool.

Pros: Covers indoor, outdoor and landscaping; easy for first-timers; fast browsing of options.

Cons: Detail and realism trail the leaders; limited refinement; moderate style count.

Price: Free tier + paid plans for higher resolution and more generations.

5. Spacely AI — built for designers and teams

Spacely AI (spacely.ai) targets professionals. Alongside room redesigns it offers moodboard generation and handles commercial spaces — offices, cafés, retail — better than the consumer-first tools. If you're a designer pitching clients, those extras earn their keep.

For a homeowner just repainting a bedroom, though, some of that power is overkill, and the best features live on higher tiers. Everyday redesign quality is competitive but not clearly ahead of GenRoom or Interior AI, and the style library is comparable to the mid-pack.

Pros: Moodboards and commercial-space support; team-oriented features; solid overall quality.

Cons: More than a casual decorator needs; premium features gated; standard styles nothing special.

Price: Free tier + paid plans aimed at pros and teams.

6. Havenly — when you'd rather hand it to a human

Havenly isn't an AI generator at all, and that's the point. You fill out a style quiz, get matched with a real interior designer, and work with them on a plan you can actually buy and furnish. For people who feel paralyzed by choice or want accountability, that human touch is worth a lot.

The trade-offs are speed and cost. Instead of 30 seconds you're looking at days of back-and-forth, and instead of a few dollars you're paying a per-room fee. It's a service, not a toy — great for a real project, overkill for testing a wall color.

Pros: A real designer's judgment; shoppable, realistic plans; hand-holding for the indecisive.

Cons: Far pricier than AI tools; much slower; you're buying a package, not experimenting freely.

Price: Roughly $79 and up per room, depending on package.

7. Decorilla — high-end, full-service design

Decorilla sits at the premium end. Like Havenly it's human-led, but geared toward larger, more involved projects: you get multiple designers competing with concepts, detailed 3D renderings, and a full shopping list with trade discounts. For a whole-home redesign or a renovation you're serious about, it can genuinely replace hiring a local firm.

Naturally, it's the most expensive option on this list and the slowest to deliver. It's simply the wrong tool if you just want to see your den in five different styles this afternoon.

Pros: Multiple concepts to choose from; professional 3D renders; end-to-end furnishing support.

Cons: Highest cost; longest turnaround; overkill for quick ideas.

Price: Roughly $449 and up per room, by package.

How to choose the right one

Match the tool to the job. If you want to experiment freely — try ten styles on your own room tonight and refine the winner — an AI tool is the obvious choice, and GenRoom offers the widest styles, real text-based editing and the lowest entry price. If your priority is virtual staging for a listing, Interior AI and ReimagineHome are purpose-built for it. If you're a designer or team, Spacely AI's moodboards and commercial support fit the workflow.

If, on the other hand, you don't want to touch software at all and would rather a professional own the outcome, Havenly (lighter, cheaper) or Decorilla (premium, full-service) are the human options — just budget more time and money.

FAQ

Are these AI interior design tools free?

Most offer a free tier or free starter credits so you can test them, but full-resolution, watermark-free results usually require a paid plan or credit pack. GenRoom, for example, gives you free starter credits and then sells one-time credit packs from $6.99, so you're not locked into a subscription. The human services (Havenly, Decorilla) are paid from the start.

Which is best for beginners?

For someone who has never done this before, a one-click AI tool like GenRoom or HomeDesigns AI is the gentlest start — upload a photo, pick a style, done. GenRoom's text editor also means you can fix small things in plain English instead of learning masks or settings. If you'd rather not deal with any tool, Havenly hands the whole thing to a designer.

Do they really work from just a photo?

Yes. The core workflow for every AI tool here is to upload one photo of your existing room; the AI restyles it while trying to preserve the actual walls, windows and layout. A well-lit, straight-on shot gives the best results. Human services also start from your photos, plus a questionnaire about your taste and budget.

AI tool or hiring a designer — which should I pick?

Use an AI tool when you want speed, low cost and freedom to experiment — it's ideal for choosing a direction, testing paint or furniture, or staging a room. Hire a designer (Havenly or Decorilla) when you want a human's judgment, a plan you can execute end-to-end, and accountability on a bigger project. Many people do both: explore with AI first, then bring the favorite direction to a designer.

Are the results realistic enough to actually use?

In 2026, the top tools are convincingly photorealistic and preserve your room's structure well, which makes them reliable for visualizing decisions before you spend money. They're best treated as high-quality mockups, not exact renders — final furniture dimensions and paint tones should still be checked against real swatches and measurements.

The Bottom Line

The AI interior design space in 2026 is no longer a novelty — it's a legitimately useful part of decorating a home. For most homeowners and DIY decorators, an AI tool gives you 90% of the value at a fraction of the cost of hiring out, and GenRoom is the best all-rounder thanks to its 50+ styles, text-based AI Editor, 4K output and free-to-start pricing. If you need dedicated staging, Interior AI or ReimagineHome are strong specialists; if you want a real person to run the project, Havenly and Decorilla are worth the premium. Start with a free tier, test the same room across two or three of them, and let your own space tell you which one wins.


Comments