Agents & landlords

Turn your empty-room listing photos into furnished showcase visuals with AI

Help buyers imagine living in the space — from the shots you took on-site with your phone.

Quick stats

Third-party research and platform guidance — illustrative, not a promise of your results.

83%

of buyers’ agents said staging made it easier for buyers to visualize the home as theirs.

2025 NAR Profile of Home Staging (Realtor survey, February 2025 fielding).

49%

of sellers’ agents saw staging reduce time on market (slight or significant).

Combined 30% slight plus 19% significant decrease per NAR’s May 2025 news release.

Fast

Under a minute from upload to a full set of directions — built for deadlines.

No skills

No prompts to engineer and no design software to learn. Pick a preset, upload, done.

High quality

Illustration and photo lanes tuned for print, listings, and sharp social crops.

Use cases

Same tool — different outcomes depending on who is shipping the visuals.

For listing agents

Vacant rooms that read online

Help remote buyers understand scale and flow before the showing. Keep furniture layouts plausible for the room’s footprint so in-person visits still feel honest.

GenImagePro is coming soon — get notified for this tool and the full template library.

Join 500+ people waiting

Frequently asked

Practical answers before you join the waitlist.

  • Is virtually staged imagery allowed on my MLS?

    Rules vary by board; many require disclosure and prohibit misleading alterations. Check local MLS and advertising policies before publishing.

  • Will buyers feel deceived?

    Label virtually staged photos, keep sight lines and windows truthful, and provide empty-room photos in the same gallery when possible.

  • Does this replace a professional photographer?

    Great photography still starts in-camera; AI can enhance exposure and help visualize furnishings but cannot fix extreme blur or incorrect white balance every time.

  • Can you change wall colors or flooring?

    Often yes for concepts, but structural edits may breach MLS “material facts” guidelines—treat cosmetic previews separately from the factual listing set.