DEV Community

Cover image for 11 Best Figma AI Plugins to Try in 2025
Brijesh Dobariya
Brijesh Dobariya

Posted on • Originally published at blog.codedthemes.com

11 Best Figma AI Plugins to Try in 2025

Designers spend half their time creating and the other half fixing what they created. That’s why AI tools inside Figma have quietly become part of the everyday routine. They don’t replace creativity, but they do handle the boring bits so you can think, sketch, and move faster.
There are dozens of plugins out there, but a few stand out for how naturally they fit into the workflow. If you’ve been searching for the best Figma plugins that actually make design life easier, or wondering how AI Figma generators compare to the hype, this list may help you filter the noise.

By 2025, 84% of developers are actively using or planning to use AI tools in their daily design routine, a major shift from the 76% reported last year.

Figma AI Plugins:

1. Magician by Diagram

Magician feels less like software and more like a chatty design partner who never gets tired. Type something like “I need a minimalist onboarding screen for a finance app”, and it throws out a quick layout, icons, or even button text. Sometimes it’s spot-on. Other times it’s weirdly off but that’s kind of the point. You get sparks of direction without overthinking.
It’s especially useful during ideation. I often use it to generate placeholder content instead of staring at an empty frame. The only caution: it’s easy to over-rely on its suggestions and lose your own creative sense. Think of it as a starting nudge, not a substitute for taste.

2. Builder.io Figma Plugin

This one might save you from the endless “handoff” meetings. The Builder.io plugin can turn your Figma design into actual HTML or React code. It doesn’t always get it perfect. Some spacing and responsiveness still need manual tweaking but it’s far better than exporting a bunch of random divs.

Designers report an 82% satisfaction rate with AI-enabled plugins, while 68% say that AI tools directly enhance the quality of their creative work.
The plugin reads your layer hierarchy, converts components into clean structure, and lets developers skip the usual rebuild step. If your team constantly argues about pixel alignment and padding, this could cool things down. It’s probably the most practical AI feature in Figma right now.

3. Automator

Every designer has that one file with 500 layers named “Rectangle 392.” Automator exists for that file. You can batch-rename layers, sync styles, change colors, or apply properties across multiple frames in seconds.
What makes it interesting is that it learns your naming habits. After a while, it may suggest a consistent naming pattern based on how you usually organize files. It’s not glamorous, but when deadlines hit, Automator quietly keeps everything sane.

4. WireGen

WireGen is the lazy designer’s best friend in a good way. You write “dashboard with filters, chart, and user profile section,” and it instantly builds a wireframe. The structure is surprisingly logical: proper spacing, text blocks, and button placeholders where you’d expect them.
Does it replace UX thinking? Not really. It’s more like a jumpstart when your mind is blank, or when a client needs “something visual” in the next half hour. You can then refine, replace components, and layer your own design system on top.

77.6% of individual designers and 85.2% of design leads now rely on at least one AI plugin in their workflow, a 12% year-over-year increase.

5. Banani

Banani is a bit of a wildcard. It claims to generate full UI screens from text prompts, and it mostly delivers. The layouts tend to look modern, think soft shadows, rounded corners, clean grids but occasionally it produces something that feels like an AI trying too hard.
Still, for brainstorming or concept pitching, it’s fantastic. When a client says, “Show me three directions,” Banani helps you get there without burning a day on mockups. I like that it also mixes influences. You can say “Material design with pastel tones”, and it’ll try to merge the two in a coherent layout.

6. FigPilot

Imagine having ChatGPT sitting inside Figma, except it actually understands layers. FigPilot lets you ask questions like “How can I improve text hierarchy on this screen?” or “Write a short CTA for this pricing page.”
It’s not always wise to take its advice literally. Some suggestions sound like they were written by a marketing intern but it’s great for getting unstuck. I’ve used it to generate alternate versions of microcopy or to explain accessibility issues to non-designers during reviews.

7. Anima

Anima has been around for a while, but the new AI additions make it smarter about responsive design. You can export full Figma pages to HTML, React, or CSS, and it automatically adds breakpoints that adapt to screen size.
If you’ve ever tried to hand off a desktop-only design to a dev team, you’ll appreciate how Anima interprets mobile behavior automatically. It still needs human eyes especially for complex animations but for static responsive layouts, it’s reliable.

8. Blush AI

I’ve used Blush for years to get quick illustrations, but the AI version is something else. You can describe a scene “two people collaborating at a laptop, in flat pastel style” and it creates it for you. It’s almost eerie how well it understands tone and emotion in visual form.
Sometimes it misses the mark (hands are still an AI weakness), but it saves hours when you need consistent visuals for a brand kit or blog graphics. Plus, the plugin keeps everything editable inside Figma, so no more jumping to other tools.

9. Magic Patterns

Magic Patterns isn’t as flashy as others, but it’s the kind of tool you end up using more than you expect. It generates seamless patterns, grids, and textures that match your existing color palette.
I used it recently for a product dashboard background with a faint geometric pattern that looked hand-made but subtle. It’s those little design touches that AI surprisingly handles well. Still, you’ll want to test variations; not all generated textures translate well in dark themes.

10. PromptInfuser

PromptInfuser feels like a peek into the future. It’s meant for people designing AI-driven apps, think chatbots, AI search tools, or writing assistants. The plugin lets you wire up sample prompts and outputs directly in your Figma prototype.
You can visualize how an AI might respond to user queries, which helps when designing UX flows for conversational apps. It’s still a bit experimental and buggy, but for those exploring AI product interfaces, this plugin opens interesting possibilities.

11. Tappy

Not everything about AI in design has to be “creative.” Tappy takes a more analytical route. It measures how likely users are to tap or miss UI elements on mobile designs. It checks spacing, button size, and distance between actions, giving you quick feedback on touch ergonomics.
It’s surprisingly humbling. I once thought my mobile layout was perfect until Tappy pointed out that my primary CTA was too close to the bottom edge for small phones. It’s like having a UX researcher quietly correcting your overconfidence.

More than half (52%) of freelance designers already incorporate generative AI for tasks like sketching, wireframing, and content generation, with optimism about AI-driven productivity growing steadily.

Top comments (0)