“The World’s #1 AI Home Design Tool.”
HomeDesignsAI generates new designs for interiors, exteriors, gardens, and real estate presentations based on uploaded photos. Users select the room type, style, and scope of changes; the AI then generates visual variations. Additional features include virtual staging, material changes, furniture removal, room composition, and, in some cases, 2D-to-3D or video outputs.
HomeDesignsAI
The World’s #1 AI Home Design Tool
Location: Romania ⓘ ⚠️ No confirmed information is available regarding a complete, current business address – as of June 12, 2026.
Pro Plan Significantly higher design quota, more than 80 styles and room types, as well as expanded use of design and editing features. Other Universal Credits Shared credit balance for redesign, video, virtual staging, material swap, furniture removal, and other modules; additional credits can be added. Business Add-ons Advanced tools such as material swap, paint visualizer, and other professional design features. Additional professional features, including advanced room composition and more comprehensive design tools. White-Label Widget Embeddable design interface for websites and platforms, combining interior design with usage-based billing. API Custom usage-based model for integrating design features into your own products. Enterprise Custom agreement with higher volume and the option to exclude customer data from model training.
HomeDesignsAI is a generative design platform for living spaces, facades, gardens, and real estate visualizations. An existing photo is uploaded and reinterpreted based on a desired style. This allows for the quick generation of various interior design and renovation ideas without the need to build a complete 3D model.
Target audience
This offering is aimed at DIY renovators, interior designers, real estate agents, home staging service providers, architects in the early conceptual phases, furniture suppliers, and marketing teams. For professional designers, it is primarily a useful tool for generating ideas and communication, rather than a technical design platform.
Outstanding features
In addition to complete room redesigns, individual materials, colors, or objects can be modified. Empty rooms can be furnished virtually, existing furniture can be removed, and floor plans or rooms can be incorporated into further visualizations. Companies can integrate the technology into their own websites via API or a hosted white-label widget.
Key Areas of Application
Typical applications include renovation inspiration, real estate listings, virtual interior design, client presentations, social media content, and quickly exploring different design styles. Furniture and renovation companies can show potential customers visual suggestions before detailed planning begins.
Usage & Notes
For best results, use a bright, unobstructed photo that clearly shows the room’s layout. Generated images must then be checked for unintended changes to windows, doors, stairs, connections, and proportions. Before uploading, people, family photos, addresses, or other sensitive details should be removed.
| Target audience | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Private individuals | Very well suited – for renovation ideas, furnishing, color testing, garden planning, and visual inspiration. |
| Self-employed / Freelancers | Yes – useful for interior designers, architects, real estate agents, home stagers, and marketing freelancers. |
| SMEs | Yes – suitable for design firms, furniture retailers, construction companies, real estate firms, and renovation service providers. |
| Large enterprises | Conditionally yes – API and white-label widget enable integration; data protection and enterprise contracts must be reviewed. |
| Architects / Interior Designers | Yes, for early visualization – good for variations and client presentations, but not a substitute for dimensionally accurate CAD or technical planning. |
| Real estate agents | Very well suited – virtual staging, furniture removal, and quick room variations support property listings and marketing. |
| Trades / Construction Companies | To a limited extent – good for brainstorming and client coordination, not for structural, technical, or permit-ready construction planning. |
| Organizations with data protection concerns | Somewhat critical to limited – US processing, training on API content outside the enterprise, and lack of public EU data residency. |
Hosting & Data
1) On-prem / local hosting
Meaning: The company operates the solution on its own hardware or within its own infrastructure. In the strictest sense, not only the application runs locally, but ideally the model as well.
2) Private cloud / data center
Meaning: The solution runs in a dedicated or more clearly separated cloud environment, often with a hosting provider or hyperscaler, but in a German data center or in a particularly controlled environment.
3) EU SaaS / managed
Meaning: The provider operates the solution itself as a service. The company uses the tool as a ready-made cloud service, ideally with EU data residency.
4) Hybrid
Meaning: One part of the processing remains internal / local / in a private cloud, while another part runs in an external cloud or EU SaaS.
5) AVV / DPA
Meaning: This is the data processing agreement or Data Processing Addendum. It governs that the provider processes personal data on behalf of the customer and is bound by the customer's instructions.
6) No training
Meaning: The provider does not use your prompts, uploads, attachments, chat histories, or outputs for training or improving the general model — ideally excluded by contract.
7) Open-source / transparency path
Meaning: There is a path toward greater technical transparency and sovereignty, for example through:
- open models
- documented components
- self-hostable parts
- traceable architecture
- export / switching options
| On-prem / local hosting | ❓ |
| Private cloud / data center | ⚠️ |
| EU SaaS / Managed | ❓ |
| Hybrid | ❓ |
| DPA / AVV | ❓ |
| No training on customer data | ⚠️ |
| Open source / transparency path | ❓ |
On-prem / local hosting: indirect / not available
The website describes the use of SaaS, APIs, and widgets. On-premises, local, or self-hosted deployment on customer hardware is not mentioned on the website.
Private Cloud / Data Center: Partially
There is an Enterprise page featuring API and white-label widget solutions, as well as references to “enterprise-grade security.” However, the website does not specifically describe a dedicated EU/EEA data center, an isolated private cloud environment, or a controlled customer instance.
EU SaaS / Managed: unclear
A managed cloud service is evidently available, but EU data residency or EU/EEA hosting is not confirmed on the website. Instead, the privacy policy mentions international transfers, including to the U.S.
Hybrid: unclear
The website describes APIs, widgets, and SaaS, but does not specify a concrete hybrid model in which part of the data is processed locally or in a private customer environment and another part is processed externally.
AVV / DPA: unclear
A Data Processing Agreement (DPA) or a corresponding option to order one is not specified on the website.
No training: partial
For the API/Enterprise documentation, an opt-out from model training is specified only for Enterprise users. At the same time, the API Terms state that inputs and outputs can be used for training without a specific “Enterprise Privacy” plan. For general SaaS use, a corresponding opt-out is not clearly specified on the website.
Open Source / Transparency Path: Indirect / Not Available
Open-source components, open models, self-hostable parts, or any other transparency pathway are not specified on the website. The API Terms also prohibit reverse engineering and the discovery of source code or model weights.
Data Processing
The website documents that the service is processed centrally in the cloud. The general privacy policy lists uploaded images and designs as user-generated content and mentions their transfer to service providers for hosting, payment, support, and analytics. For API/Enterprise, the website cites cloud hosting via providers such as AWS or Google Cloud as an example. At the same time, the website mentions international data transfers, including to the U.S. The website does not specify EU/EEA data residency, a specific data center location, a list of sub-processors, or a publicly accessible Data Processing Agreement (DPA).
Conclusion
For an EU/EEA tool directory, HomeDesignsAI’s GDPR/hosting documentation is currently too incomplete to demonstrate clear compliance. Positive aspects include existing data protection texts, data subject rights, security information, and an Enterprise opt-out for API training. However, essential evidence for the European region is missing from the website: EU/EEA server location or data residency, a Data Processing Agreement (DPA), sub-processors, clear assurances regarding no training in standard use, and on-premises/self-hosting. Therefore, the overall assessment is “unclear.”
Sources
- https://homedesigns.ai/privacy-policy
- https://api.homedesigns.ai/homedesignsai-api-documentation/others/homedesigns-ai-api-privacy-policy
- https://api.homedesigns.ai/homedesignsai-api-documentation/others/homedesigns-ai-api-terms-of-service
- https://homedesigns.ai/enterprise
- https://homedesigns.ai/affiliate-program
- https://homedesigns.ai/terms-of-service
| On-prem / local hosting | ❓ |
| Private cloud / data center | ⚠️ |
| EU SaaS / Managed | ❓ |
| Hybrid | ❓ |
| DPA / AVV | ❓ |
| No training on customer data | ⚠️ |
| Open source / transparency path | ❓ |
On-prem / local hosting: indirect / not available
The website describes the use of SaaS, APIs, and widgets. On-premises, local, or self-hosted deployment on customer hardware is not mentioned on the website.
Private Cloud / Data Center: Partially
There is an Enterprise page featuring API and white-label widget solutions, as well as references to “enterprise-grade security.” However, the website does not specifically describe a dedicated EU/EEA data center, an isolated private cloud environment, or a controlled customer instance.
EU SaaS / Managed: unclear
A managed cloud service is evidently available, but EU data residency or EU/EEA hosting is not confirmed on the website. Instead, the privacy policy mentions international transfers, including to the U.S.
Hybrid: unclear
The website describes APIs, widgets, and SaaS, but does not specify a concrete hybrid model in which part of the data is processed locally or in a private customer environment and another part is processed externally.
AVV / DPA: unclear
A Data Processing Agreement (DPA) or a corresponding option to order one is not specified on the website.
No training: partial
For the API/Enterprise documentation, an opt-out from model training is specified only for Enterprise users. At the same time, the API Terms state that inputs and outputs can be used for training without a specific “Enterprise Privacy” plan. For general SaaS use, a corresponding opt-out is not clearly specified on the website.
Open Source / Transparency Path: Indirect / Not Available
Open-source components, open models, self-hostable parts, or any other transparency pathway are not specified on the website. The API Terms also prohibit reverse engineering and the discovery of source code or model weights.
Data Processing
The website documents that the service is processed centrally in the cloud. The general privacy policy lists uploaded images and designs as user-generated content and mentions their transfer to service providers for hosting, payment, support, and analytics. For API/Enterprise, the website cites cloud hosting via providers such as AWS or Google Cloud as an example. At the same time, the website mentions international data transfers, including to the U.S. The website does not specify EU/EEA data residency, a specific data center location, a list of sub-processors, or a publicly accessible Data Processing Agreement (DPA).
Conclusion
For an EU/EEA tool directory, HomeDesignsAI’s GDPR/hosting documentation is currently too incomplete to demonstrate clear compliance. Positive aspects include existing data protection texts, data subject rights, security information, and an Enterprise opt-out for API training. However, essential evidence for the European region is missing from the website: EU/EEA server location or data residency, a Data Processing Agreement (DPA), sub-processors, clear assurances regarding no training in standard use, and on-premises/self-hosting. Therefore, the overall assessment is “unclear.”
Sources
- https://homedesigns.ai/privacy-policy
- https://api.homedesigns.ai/homedesignsai-api-documentation/others/homedesigns-ai-api-privacy-policy
- https://api.homedesigns.ai/homedesignsai-api-documentation/others/homedesigns-ai-api-terms-of-service
- https://homedesigns.ai/enterprise
- https://homedesigns.ai/affiliate-program
- https://homedesigns.ai/terms-of-service
Strengths & weaknesses at a glance
| Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|
| • Create numerous design variations very quickly | • Results are not to scale or technically sound. |
| • No CAD or 3D modeling skills required | • The AI may alter windows, doors, room geometry, or furniture in implausible ways. |
| • Interior, exterior, and garden design all in one interface | • No reliable verification of materials, costs, or constructability. |
| • Useful for real estate marketing and client meetings | • By default, inputs and outputs can be used for model improvement; an opt-out option is described primarily for Enterprise. |
| • Commercial use available with appropriate pricing plans | • The server location and current complete list of subcontractors are not clearly specified publicly. |
| • API and embeddable no-code widget | • No publicly available Terms of Service (TOS) found. |
| • Custom branding and white-label solutions for businesses | • Uploaded apartment photos may contain private items, people, or location information. |
| • Free tools for initial testing. | • Legal documents contain some imprecise or incomplete wording. |
Reviews
0 reviews in total
There are no confirmed reviews for this tool yet.
Submit review
Your review will only become visible after email confirmation. This protects the portal against abuse.
Report review
Please select the reason why this review should be checked.
GDPR-compliant usage possible?
For the EU/EEA region, it is not clearly demonstrable based on the website documentation that the service is used in compliance with the GDPR. Positive aspects include a general privacy policy, the mention of data subjects’ rights, and an API/Enterprise notice regarding an enterprise opt-out for model training. On the negative side, the website mentions international data transfers, including to the U.S., but does not specify a concrete EU/EEA server location, EU data residency, a publicly accessible Data Processing Agreement (DPA), or a list of subprocessors. As a result, the legal and hosting situation is insufficiently documented for users in Europe.
Positive
The website includes a privacy policy with information on the data collected, data subject rights, and international data transfers. The API/Enterprise documentation mentions security measures such as AES-256 and SSL/TLS. Additionally, the API documentation specifies an Enterprise opt-out for the use of data in model training.
Negative
The website explicitly states that personal data may also be processed outside the user’s country of residence, including the United States. No specific server location or EU/EEA data center is mentioned. A publicly available Data Processing Agreement (DPA), a list of subprocessors, binding statements regarding EU data residency, and on-premises/self-hosting options are not provided on the website. Regarding the API, it also states that inputs and outputs can be used for training by default, unless a specific “Enterprise Privacy” plan applies.
Server Location
Not specifically stated on the website. The general privacy policy mentions international data transfers, including to the U.S. The API privacy policy lists AWS and Google Cloud as examples of cloud hosting providers, but without specifying a region or data center location.