Interior Designers: Where to Get Help With AI

Interior designers are frustrated with AI. Luckily, there’s help.

Your interior design brain, on its worst day, kicks ChatGPT’s butt.

The training data that all AI models have had access to: TV shows, blog posts, interior design magazines, podcast transcripts and decades-old textbooks, is absolute garbage compared to the knowledge floating around in your head.

Your formal education, learning from mentors & peers, the mistakes you learned from, the trial & error and your interactions with your clients is of a vastly higher quality than anything any AI has access to.

So, when a homeowner asks Claude or Gemini or ChatGPT help them re-design their living room, you can rest assured that those AIs will never, ever create something on par with you. It’s technically impossible.

But…and this is a big but, AI is going to transform interior design. Just like it will every other industry on planet earth. Thinking your business doesn’t need AI is a huge mistake. And I think most designers understand this.

The problem is, that they’ve tried to work with AI and been underwhelmed with the results. The DIY route isn’t working for most interior designers.

Luckily, there are 6 categories of AI help available to interior designers in 2026. In this video, I dive into each category, describe what it can do for designers and showcase some of the biggest names in each category.

Let’s dive in.

Interior Designers: Where to Get Help With AI
Douglas Robb - Interior DesignHer

Key Takeaways

  • AI is not going to replace you. Your design knowledge, built from years of client work, mistakes, and mentorship, isn't vastly superior to anything that AI has ever trained upon.

  • AI isn't going away either. Hoping you won't need to deal with it isn't a business strategy.

  • You don't have to become a prompt engineer. There are people and tools built specifically to handle that interface for you.

  • A big Instagram following and a lot of ad spend doesn't mean someone is actually good at AI for interior designers. Ask for proof before you pay for AI support.

  • It's not too late. If you're not ready to commit today, start by listening to AI educators and asking questions in a community of designers going through the same thing.


Conclusions

Strategic Benefits

Picking the right category of AI help means you stop paying for the wrong kind of support. A designer who needs a quick prompt library doesn't need a $5,000 consulting engagement. A designer with a team of seven who needs everyone speaking AI the same way doesn't need a $10 prompt subscription. Matching the category to your actual situation, not the loudest marketing, is what turns AI spend into AI results.

Implementation Blueprint

Start by checking what's already inside the software you're paying for. Houzz Pro, Studio Designer, and Programa have all quietly added AI features that solve real problems without a new purchase. If that's not enough, identify which of the remaining five categories actually matches your situation: do you want to learn it yourself, work alongside someone, or hand it off entirely? That answer narrows the field fast.

Professional Transformation

The goal isn't to become an AI expert. It's to spend your time designing, not prompt-engineering. Whether that means a $10 tool, a $400 course, or a $5,000 consulting engagement, the right fit gives you back the hours AI was supposed to save in the first place, without asking you to become someone or something you're not.


Join the Interior DesignHer Community

If you enjoyed this guide and podcast, you're going to love all the other business education resources we're bringing to interior designers.

As interior designers ourselves, we created Interior DesignHer to bring top-notch business education to interior designers. We especially have a soft-spot for interior design solopreneurs & micro-businesses.

Subscribe now so you never miss our latest business guidance, guest interviews, and insider strategies specifically for interior designers.

Next
Next

Interior Design Is A Luxury Business. Why Are Most Designers Struggling?