AI Interior Design Ideas

Explore 196 AI-generated interior design styles across 14 room types — from modern and minimalist to Japandi, Scandinavian, farmhouse, and beyond. Each combination applies professional interior design principles through AI visualization, so you can browse room design styles before committing to anything. Upload your own room photo to see any style applied to your actual space in seconds.

Modern Interior Design

Clean lines, functional spaces, timeless appeal

Modern interior design strips away visual noise to let architecture and carefully chosen pieces speak for themselves. It relies on geometric forms, neutral palettes with deliberate accent colours, and materials like concrete, glass, and brushed metal to create rooms that feel effortlessly ordered.

Minimalist Interior Design

Less, but better — every object earns its place

Minimalist design applies a simple test to every object in a space: does it serve a clear purpose, or does it bring genuine joy? Anything that fails both criteria leaves the room. The result is an environment where attention is never scattered, materials are appreciated for their intrinsic quality, and the mind can settle.

Scandinavian Interior Design

Warmth, function, and the beauty of natural materials

Scandinavian design emerged from a climate where winters are long and daylight is scarce, so rooms were engineered to maximise warmth and comfort without sacrificing practicality. Light woods, wool textiles, candlelight, and handcrafted objects give the style a human quality that purely minimal approaches can lack.

Industrial Interior Design

Raw materials, honest structure, urban character

Industrial design treats a building's infrastructure as a feature rather than something to hide. Exposed brick, steel beams, concrete floors, and visible ductwork form the backdrop. Against that raw shell, leather, worn wood, and vintage factory pieces create spaces that feel lived-in from day one.

Tropical Interior Design

Lush greenery, natural materials, resort-inspired calm

Tropical interior design brings the outdoor environment inside, using plants, natural fibres, and warm humidity-appropriate materials to create rooms that feel like retreats rather than offices. The palette draws from nature — forest greens, clay reds, rattan browns, and clean whites — and the approach to accessories rewards abundance over restraint.

Bohemian Interior Design

Collected over time, layered with intention, unapologetically individual

Bohemian interiors reject the idea that everything must match. The style is built from objects gathered across time and place — vintage textiles, handmade ceramics, inherited furniture, travel souvenirs — layered together until a room reflects the specific person who lives in it. Rules exist to be adapted, not followed.

Vintage Interior Design

Character from another era, curated for life today

Vintage design does not recreate a specific historical period faithfully — that is the territory of period restoration. Instead it draws selectively from the past, mixing mid-century furniture with art deco lighting or Victorian ironwork with 1970s ceramics, to create rooms that feel richly layered rather than museum-like.

Luxury Interior Design

Exceptional materials, expert craft, enduring quality

Luxury interiors are defined not by expense for its own sake but by the rigorous selection of materials and the quality of their execution. Marble with visible veining, hand-stitched upholstery, bespoke joinery, and lighting designed for a specific space create environments where every surface repays close inspection.

Japandi Interior Design

Wabi-sabi meets hygge — imperfect simplicity

Japandi fuses Japanese wabi-sabi philosophy with Scandinavian hygge sensibility, producing spaces that celebrate natural imperfection, restrained craftsmanship, and deliberate calm. Unlike either parent style alone, Japandi rooms feel simultaneously minimal and warm, with natural materials — pale wood, rattan, linen — playing against muted earthy tones and carefully edited objects.

Art Deco Interior Design

Glamour, geometry, and gold — the roaring twenties reimagined

Art Deco interior design is an exercise in confident opulence — geometric patterns, mirrored surfaces, rich jewel tones, and metallic accents assembled to create spaces that feel theatrical and deliberate. Born in 1920s Paris and popularised globally through the 1930s, the style translates into contemporary residential settings when applied with discipline and a selective hand rather than wholesale reproduction.

Coastal Interior Design

Breezy, light-filled spaces that bring the ocean indoors

Coastal design distils the sensory experience of seaside living into an interior language — salt-bleached timbers, woven textures, the shifting blue-green palette of shallow water, and an abundance of natural light. At its best it is neither nautical-themed nor literalist; instead it creates rooms that feel genuinely relaxed and connected to the natural environment outside, with materials and colours that reference the coast without reproducing it.

Farmhouse Interior Design

Warmth, patina, and the honest beauty of working materials

Farmhouse interior design values substance over surface — reclaimed wood, hand-thrown ceramics, linen and cotton textiles, and furniture that has earned its character through use rather than applied distressing. Contemporary farmhouse interiors balance this material honesty with thoughtful editing that prevents the aesthetic from reading as cluttered or nostalgic, creating rooms that feel lived-in and genuinely warm.

Mediterranean Interior Design

Sun-warmed, textured, and alive with colour and light

Mediterranean interior design draws from the architecture and material culture of southern Europe — terracotta tiles, whitewashed walls, wrought iron, handmade ceramics, and the warm, vivid colour palette of Spain, Italy, and Greece. The style is most successful when it prioritises texture, craft, and the interaction of light with tactile surfaces rather than simply applying colour.

Transitional Interior Design

The best of traditional and contemporary, seamlessly united

Transitional interior design sits in the productive tension between traditional warmth and contemporary clarity. It avoids the formality of classical interiors while retaining their sense of permanence, and avoids the austerity of modern design while adopting its clean geometry and functional approach. The result is rooms that feel neither dated nor aggressively current — permanently liveable rather than momentarily fashionable.

How AI room redesign works

Seeing a design style applied to someone else’s room is useful. Seeing it applied to your own room is transformative. Here’s all it takes:

  1. 1

    Upload a photo of your room

    Any smartphone photo works. Drag it onto the upload area — it stays on your device and is never stored on our servers.

  2. 2

    Choose a room type and design style

    Pick from 14 room types and any of the 14 styles on this page. Add an optional custom note — “keep the fireplace”, “warm tones only” — for tighter control.

  3. 3

    Get your AI-generated redesign in seconds

    Google Gemini processes your photo and returns a photorealistic redesign in 30–60 seconds. Compare before and after with the interactive slider, then try as many styles as you like.