Best AI for interior design
An interior render is useful only if it's plausible: the sofa is sofa-sized, the light comes from the window it should, the wood tones agree with each other. Most AI gives you a "design magazine" image where the proportions are subtly impossible. The right model holds spatial logic and material consistency; the wrong one gives you a beautiful room you could never actually build.
Best at photoreal interiors with believable lighting, plausible proportions, and consistent materials — close enough to a real render to use in a client conversation or a renovation plan.
FLUX is better for stylized mood-board imagery — atmospheric, art-directed shots that capture a vibe rather than an accurate floor plan.
Photoreal interior render: a small 12x14 ft living room, one large window on the left wall with afternoon light, doorway on the right. Warm minimalist style — oak floor, cream walls, a low charcoal sofa, one large plant, black metal floor lamp, a simple wood coffee table. Natural light, realistic shadows, eye-level wide shot, believable proportions.
What to look for in any model
- 1Describe the room's dimensions, light direction, and fixed elements (window wall, doorway) — without constraints the model invents the architecture
- 2Name a specific style and palette ("warm minimalist, oak + cream + black, lots of natural light") — "modern" means nothing
- 3Treat it as a concept, not a spec — measure before you buy anything; the model can't do a real layout or a budget
- 4Generate the same room several times — pick the one whose proportions look most real, not the prettiest
Run it yourself — free, no card
See the actual output, the actual cost, the actual latency. StudyAIMastery is free to start.