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AICreatorsTech

Figma’s AI-powered design-to-code tool is now live for all

Figma Make now lets users of any plan turn natural language prompts into working app prototypes without writing code.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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- Editor-in-Chief
Jul 24, 2025, 12:38 PM EDT
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A chatbox reads, “Create this music player, and have the disc spin with every new track to bring it to life.” On the right, a CD is displayed next to a tracklist.
Image: Figma
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Figma’s AI-powered prompt‑to‑app tool, Figma Make, is officially out of beta and open for everyone to explore. Born at this year’s Config 2025 conference, Make represents Figma’s biggest step yet toward melding design and development into a single, AI‑driven workflow. Gone are the days when “design” and “code” sat in separate silos—now you can go from a rough sketch or a handful of words to a clickable prototype or even working code, all within the familiar Figma canvas.

First unveiled on May 7, 2025, Figma Make began its journey as an invite‑only beta for Full Seat subscribers—Figma’s top‑tier paid plan that unlocks every nook of the platform’s design features. Over the past two months, the company gathered feedback from early adopters, iterating on everything from AI prompt responsiveness to code fidelity. As of July 24, 2025, Make has graduated to general availability: every Figma user can now summon AI‑powered app prototyping via natural‑language commands, without needing a single line of manual code.

At its core, Figma Make combines large‑language‑model understanding with Figma’s existing design engine. You simply type a description—“Create an animated music player with a dark theme and playback controls,” for instance—and the tool riffs off your prompt to generate interactive components, layouts, and even starter code. Need a chart? Ask for it. Want a responsive navigation bar? Describe how it should collapse on mobile, and the AI will handle the CSS and interactivity scaffolding.

A chatbox prompt reads “Add an animation when you open and close the settings panel.” On the right hand side, audio settings include cross fade, streaming quality, download quality, and an equalizer.
Image: Figma

What sets Make apart is its ability to ingest visual references alongside text prompts. Drop an image or import an existing Figma file to anchor the AI’s design language. This means you can maintain brand consistency or reuse established UI kits simply by feeding them into the model. From there, you can fine‑tune individual elements—text styling, color palettes, spacing—either through follow‑up prompts or the standard Figma inspector panel.

Although everyone can experiment with Make, Figma has baked in tiered restrictions to keep the feature aligned with subscription plans:

  • Free Starter Seat, View, Collab, Dev Seats: These users can dream up prototypes in their personal drafts, but they cannot publish Make‑generated content to shared or team files. It’s a sandbox environment—great for exploration, limited for production use.
  • Full Seats: Members on Figma’s paid tier enjoy unrestricted publishing capabilities. You can take that AI‑spit‑shined prototype straight into a live project, hand it off to developers with production‑ready code snippets, or embed it in documentation without ever leaving Figma.

This approach ensures that casual tinkerers get a taste of what’s possible, while power users—and by extension, Figma’s subscription revenue—benefit from the full production workflow.

Make isn’t the only AI toy in Figma’s sandbox. Rolling out alongside it are several other generative features:

  • Make & edit image: Transform or generate images directly in the canvas via text prompts—everything from product mockups to whimsical illustrations.
  • Resolution booster: Instantly upscale low‑res images to crisp, publication‑quality assets, powered by AI image enhancement.
  • Code layers & rename layers: Automate repetitive layer naming and inject production‑ready code snippets into your designs to streamline handoff and maintenance.

These tools together paint a picture of Figma as more than a design tool—it’s becoming an end‑to‑end product platform that can shepherd ideas from whiteboard sketches all the way to deployed code.

To balance free experimentation with sustainable platform costs, Figma is introducing a credit‑based system for AI usage:

  • Full Seat Users: Enjoy effectively unlimited AI usage today. While “unlimited” is flagged as temporary, Figma has promised not to enforce credit caps on Full Seats until later this year.
  • View, Collab, Dev Seats: Receive lower daily and monthly credit allowances, tuned for occasional use and subject to change as Figma learns from real‑world consumption patterns.

Later in 2025, team admins on Full Seat plans will have the option to purchase top‑up credits, ensuring that design teams with heavy AI workflows won’t hit a sudden throttle mid‑project.

The unification of design and code via AI promises several benefits:

  1. Speed: Rapidly prototype user flows without enlisting developer resources for early mockups.
  2. Accessibility: Empower non‑technical stakeholders—product managers, marketers, even CEOs—to iterate on functional prototypes.
  3. Collaboration: Collapse the handoff gap; design tweaks and code updates live in the same document.
  4. Scalability: Standardize UI components and code patterns through AI prompts, ensuring consistency across large product portfolios.

However, there are caveats. AI‑generated code may still require human review for performance, accessibility, and security. And firms worried about IP leakage will want to vet how design data and prompts are stored and processed by Figma’s backend systems.

By opening Figma Make to all users, Figma is signaling its commitment to an AI‑first, design‑equals‑development future. As competing platforms like Adobe, Canva, and emerging no‑code tools pivot toward generative features, Figma’s deep integration of AI into its core canvas could give it a vital edge.

In the coming months, look for more granular credit controls, expanded AI‑driven code exports (think React hooks or Flutter widgets), and tighter governance features for enterprise customers. For now, everyone from solo designers to enterprise teams can log in, pop open Make, and start turning sentences into software—no coding required. It’s a bold glimpse of design’s next frontier.


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