AI Living Room Design

Redesign Your Living Room
in Seconds

AI living room design lets you see your space completely restyled in about 10 seconds flat. Your living room is where you spend most of your waking hours at home, so getting it right matters more than any other room in the house. Upload a photo, pick a style, and get a photorealistic render showing exactly what your living room could look like with new furniture, colors, and arrangement. Try modern, boho, minimalist, transitional, or any style you're curious about without buying a single thing. See if that $3K gray sectional actually works in your space before it shows up on a delivery truck, or test whether those dark walls you've been considering would make the room feel cozy or cramped. First 3 renders are free, no credit card required.

After
Before
BeforeAfterAI Living Room Design
~10 secondsPer render
100+ stylesTo choose from
3 free rendersNo card needed

Built for professionals who move fast

Interior DesignersReal Estate AgentsHomeownersArchitects
Popular Styles

Living Room Design Styles

AI Modern Living Room design by StableRender

Modern

Low-profile furniture, neutral palette, statement lighting. Refined and current.

AI Boho Living Room design by StableRender

Boho

Layered rugs, mixed patterns, plants everywhere. Warm and collected over time.

AI Transitional Living Room design by StableRender

Transitional

Classic meets contemporary. Comfortable pieces with clean lines and neutral colors.

AI Industrial Living Room design by StableRender

Industrial

Exposed brick, metal frames, leather seating. Raw textures with urban edge.

AI Coastal Living Room design by StableRender

Coastal

Light blues, white slipcovers, natural wood. Breezy without the seashell cliches.

AI Maximalist Living Room design by StableRender

Maximalist

Bold patterns, rich colors, collected art. More is more, done intentionally.

Why AI

Why AI for Living Room Design?

Stop guessing if that sofa will work

You've been staring at sofa options for weeks. Will the gray look cold? Is the sectional too big? Upload your room and see different furniture styles in your actual space. Decide in minutes, not months.

Test paint colors without buying samples

Those paint chips at the hardware store lie. They look different in every room depending on lighting and surrounding colors. See how a paint color actually looks on your walls, in your lighting, with your furniture. No more surprise disappointments.

Get everyone to agree, finally

You want modern, your partner wants traditional. Render both in your actual living room and have a real conversation about what works. Visual evidence beats arguments every time.

How it works

From idea to stunning render in 3 simple steps

01

Upload

Upload a photo or floor plan of your space.

02

Choose & Customize

Pick a style, set your goals, and let AI work its magic.

03

Render & Refine

Get stunning results in seconds. Download, share, or tweak.

Expert Tips

Living Room Design Tips

Your rug is probably too small

The most common living room mistake is a rug that's too small. It makes your furniture look like it's floating on a life raft in the middle of the ocean. The front legs of all your seating should be on the rug at minimum. Ideally, the rug extends at least 6 inches beyond the furniture on all sides. In most living rooms, that means an 8x10 or 9x12, which is bigger than most people expect. A 5x7 under a full sofa looks wrong every time. A too-small rug makes an expensive room look cheap, while a properly sized rug makes budget furniture look intentional and pulled together.

Your rug is probably too small - Living Room design tip

Pull your sofa away from the wall

Pushing all your furniture against the walls makes a living room feel like a waiting room or a middle school dance. Even pulling your sofa 6 inches forward creates a sense of intentional arrangement. In larger rooms, floating your furniture in the center with a walkway behind creates distinct zones and makes the room feel more curated and designer-like. It sounds counterintuitive for small spaces, but pulling furniture inward actually makes rooms feel bigger because you're defining a conversation area rather than just lining the perimeter. Try rendering your room with furniture pulled in to see the difference.

Pull your sofa away from the wall - Living Room design tip

Mix your lighting heights for instant atmosphere

A living room with only overhead lighting feels flat and harsh, like an office. You want light at three heights: high (ceiling fixture or tall floor lamp), medium (table lamps on side tables at seated eye level), and low (a floor-level accent like an LED strip under a media console or a candle cluster). This creates depth and warmth that a single overhead fixture simply cannot achieve. Put everything on separate switches or smart plugs so you can adjust the mood instantly. In the evening, turn off the overhead and use only the lower sources for a completely different vibe.

Mix your lighting heights for instant atmosphere - Living Room design tip

Odd numbers in groupings look better than even

Three throw pillows instead of four. Three pieces of art instead of two. A coffee table arrangement with three objects of varying heights. Odd numbers create visual tension that feels more natural and interesting than symmetrical pairs. Our brains find odd groupings more dynamic because there's no obvious center point, so our eyes keep moving. The exception is lamps and nightstands where symmetry works in bedrooms. But in a living room, odd groupings of accessories, art, and decor items always look more intentional and curated than even numbers do.

Odd numbers in groupings look better than even - Living Room design tip

Your TV doesn't have to be the focal point

Most living rooms are designed entirely around the TV. But you can make a fireplace, a gallery wall, or a large window the focal point instead, with the TV off to the side or above the mantel. The trick is arranging your main seating to face the true focal point rather than pointing everything at the screen. You'll still watch TV just fine from a slight angle, and your room will look dramatically better the 90% of the time when the TV is off. A frame TV or art TV helps too since it displays artwork when not in use instead of a black rectangle.

Your TV doesn't have to be the focal point - Living Room design tip
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Everything you need to know about Stable Render.

Still have questions?

Our team is here to help you get the most out of Stable Render.

Average response time
under 2 hours

Yes. The AI works great with open floor plans, including living rooms that flow into kitchens or dining areas without walls between them. It will redesign the visible space in your photo regardless of the layout type or how many zones are visible. Just make sure you capture the specific area you want redesigned within the camera frame.

New to Stable Render? Start free and explore all features.

No credit card required  •  Free credits to get you started

Ready to bring your designs to life?

Join thousands of homeowners, designers, and realtors who save time, impress clients, and grow their business with Stable Render.

No credit card requiredFree renders to get you started