What are the best AI apps and tips for interior design?

I want to redesign my living space and keep seeing people talk about using AI tools for interior design, but I’m not sure which apps are actually helpful or how to use them. If anyone’s used AI apps for room planning, color selection, or furniture placement, I’d love to know which ones you recommend and any tips you have. I really need some guidance before I start making decisions.

Man, AI for interior design is wild right now! I redid my living room recently and went down the rabbit hole of apps—some are amazing, some are straight up “Is this a Sims mod from 2009?” territory. Here’s what I found actually useful:

  1. RoomGPT - You literally take a pic of your room, pick a style (modern, rustic, whatever), and it spits out a whole new look. Don’t expect perfect results, but it’ll get the ideas flowing.
  2. Interior AI - Very similar, more style options, does better with weird-shaped rooms imo. Still kinda borks with windows/tv screens, but you get a vibe for colors and furniture placement.
  3. Planner 5D - More hands-on. You drag & drop furniture/walls, and the AI suggests layouts. Good if you want more control and less “surprise, here’s a couch in front of your door.”
  4. Homestyler - If you wanna go nuts, this is the closest to sims-style room planning. You can even upload your own items (ish). Kinda clunky at times.
  5. IKEA Kreativ - It scans your room and lets you swap in actual IKEA furniture. Easy way to see what’s gonna fit, but beware, it makes you want to buy everything.

Tips:

  • AI tools get weird with mirrors and sometimes “invent” random furniture, so take results with a grain of salt.
  • Use the output for inspiration, not a shopping list. The recommendations can look awesome on screen but may not IRL (hello, neon pink kitchens).
  • Mix AI ideas with your own taste, otherwise your house ends up looking like every Airbnb ever.

Also, consider design principles, too—not just what looks “AI cool.” Think about lighting, traffic flow (don’t block doors/windows), and storage needs.

Oh, and don’t get stuck in “endless render” hell. Set a timer, pick a design you like, and go for it! The perfect is the enemy of the DONE. Real life looks less polished than those AI renderings, but way more you.

Hope this helps and that your redesigned space slaps!

If you’re serious about redoing your space and not just playing with pretty digital rooms, you need to get hands-on with the actual measurements and flow first. @sterrenkijker gave a solid rundown of apps, but I’ll push back a bit: all these “upload a pic and get a design” tools are fun, but 90% of the time, they kinda fall apart when your room isn’t a perfect square or has, y’know, actual humans living in it (don’t get me started on what some AI does to bookshelves – instant TARDIS effect, everything’s warped).

Instead, consider using something like Morpholio Board—more of a moodboarding tool with real product links and some smart search built in. Not as flashy as straight up AI renders, but it lets you pull together actual materials, paint swatches, and furniture into a collage, which imo is way truer to how designers actually work. It’s also friendlier with budgets, since you can compare prices/brands across choices.

There’s also Foyr Neo (worth a look for actual 3D plans with real dimensions), and if you have any architectural changes or want seriously pro vibes, take a spin through Houzz Pro or even Chief Architect’s Room Planner lite tools. Those aren’t as “AI-magic-tada!” but honestly, they’re more reliable for genuine planning.

My biggest tip is to always measure your real space, plug those numbers in, and build from there—too many times I see people get stuck when the digital furniture is all Barbie-sized and doesn’t fit around their actual radiators/windows/whatever. Oh, and don’t forget the AI apps can’t actually tell if your ceiling is sloped or if you have pets/kids that will immediately destroy that plush white carpet it keeps “suggesting.”

Final thought: the best “AI” is still your own eyes and gut. Use the apps for a creative jumpstart but sanity-check everything before buying/swinging a hammer. Otherwise, you’ll end up designing a room that only looks good in 2D renderland.