A practical guide on which AI tools to use, which to skip, and why every interior designer needs one platform instead of eight.
AI tools for interior designers are generative models, planning platforms, and video tools that produce visualizations, renders, moodboards, and presentations without traditional 3D modeling. In 2026 the market splits into three categories: image models (Nano Banana Pro, GPT-Image), video models (Veo 3.1, Sora 2, Kling 3, Grok), and traditional 3D planning tools (Planner 5D, Homestyler, D5 Render). Boardspace is an Israeli platform that unifies all of them under a Hebrew canvas with an AI agent that auto-routes to the right model for each task.
Image models (Nano Banana Pro, GPT-Image-2, Flux) solve 'show me how this will look.' They produce a photorealistic image from a description or reference photo. Their weakness: they can't enforce precise dimensions.
Video models (Veo 3.1, Sora 2, Kling 3, Grok) solve 'show me the space in motion.' They produce walkthroughs, in-video material swaps, and presentation openers. Weakness: high cost per minute and still struggle with consistency across long scenes.
Traditional 3D planning tools (Planner 5D, Homestyler, D5 Render) solve 'plan me a precise space with real furniture.' They deliver dimensions, furniture catalogs, and a model you can send to a contractor. Weakness: learning curve, and output looks like a 3D render — not a real photo.
A professional interior designer working solo or in a small studio wastes on average 30-40% of their time switching between tools: Pinterest for inspiration, Midjourney for sketches, V-Ray for final rendering, Photoshop for fixes, Canva for the deck, and WhatsApp for sending to the client. Every switch costs both money (parallel subscriptions) and consistency — each tool understands something different.
A unified platform like Boardspace solves this: a Hebrew-speaking agent takes a request ('Scandinavian living room, oak floor, gray sofa'), picks the best model for the job (usually Nano Banana Pro for the first image), and feeds the output to the next stage on the canvas — video, deck, moodboard — without the designer leaving the system.
Parallel subscriptions without a unified platform average $60-90/month: Midjourney ($10), Canva Pro ($13), Veed ($12), V-Ray subscription ($35), and so on. That's before counting time.
A unified platform like Boardspace starts at $19/month for base plans, with a free tier for occasional users. For a designer juggling 5-10 active projects, the direct savings are $30-50/month, not counting time.
Tip: if you're just starting, try Boardspace's free tier before buying separate subscriptions. Most designers discover they don't need all the tools they thought they needed.
Start with the existing state: one decent photo of the room. AI works much better with a real reference than with an abstract description.
On Boardspace the agent (Bordi) takes a plain description: 'turn the living room industrial — concrete wall, walnut parquet, olive-green sofa.' No prompt-writing required.
Don't settle for one. Generate three — clean, warm, bold — and send all three to the client. Approval cycles shrink by 50%.
An 8-second video from the final render impresses clients 3x more than 100 images. On Boardspace that's Kling O1 or Veo Fast — between 8 and 15 tokens.
Instead of compressing images into WhatsApp, send a Boardspace canvas link. The client sees everything in the right version, can comment, and nothing gets lost.
Open a free Boardspace account and start on the AI canvas with 100 free tokens. No credit card.
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