Test paths and zones
Use the photo to compare a clearer entry path, seating corner, planting bed shape, gravel zone, or softer transition from house to garden.

AI Garden Design From Photo
Start with a real garden or yard photo, choose a style, and generate outdoor ideas for paths, planting structure, seating, lighting, and curb appeal.


Start with your outdoor photo
Focus the preview on paths, planting structure, seating, privacy, lighting, curb appeal, and the level of maintenance you want.
Upload File
Take a photo (using 0.5x zoom)
or select from gallery.
Supports PNG, JPG, GIF up to 10MB
Outdoor Garden
Outdoor Garden is selected, so you can focus on paths, planting, seating, lighting, privacy, and maintenance level.
Add notes about paths, planting, privacy, seating, lighting, sunlight, or maintenance level before generating.
Garden decisions
Garden design is more than plant shopping. The path, edge, seating, lighting, privacy, and house connection shape whether the space feels intentional.
Use the photo to compare a clearer entry path, seating corner, planting bed shape, gravel zone, or softer transition from house to garden.
AI can suggest the visual structure of layers, height, repetition, and greenery. Local plant choice should still match your climate and maintenance level.
A good garden concept should improve the view from the street, the entry experience, and how people actually move through the space.
Garden examples
Use these outdoor examples to compare garden paths, layered planting, backyard seating, entry mood, and curb appeal before changing the real space.


Front Yard · Transitional
A front yard photo becomes a more welcoming curb appeal concept with a stronger walkway, fuller planting beds, and a clearer entry sequence.
View this case

Backyard · Biophilic
A backyard photo becomes a greener outdoor living direction with softer planting, clearer seating, and a more relaxed transition from the house.
View this case

House Architectural · Rustic
A house exterior example showing how garden structure, entry mood, and facade materials can work together as one outdoor concept.
View this caseRelated topics
After testing an outdoor garden, you may want to compare the interior or a specific room so the whole home feels connected.

Upload a room photo, pick the room type and style, and generate a practical interior direction.

Work through seating, focal walls, rugs, lighting, and open-plan flow with a visual before-and-after preview.

Preview cabinet color, backsplash direction, counter styling, lighting, and kitchen refresh ideas from one photo.

Test calmer bedroom styles, bedding layers, bedside lighting, storage, and layout changes from your current room photo.
FAQ
Upload a clear outdoor photo and choose a garden style. Roomagic uses the visible house edge, path, lawn, beds, fence, trees, and seating areas as context to generate a new outdoor design direction with paths, planting structure, lighting, privacy, and curb appeal ideas.
Use a daylight photo that shows the garden bed, lawn or ground surface, path, house edge, fence, trees, and any seating or entry point you want to keep. Avoid close-up plant photos if you want a full garden design direction.
Yes. Add notes such as low-maintenance, drought-tolerant, pet-friendly, kid-friendly, privacy-focused, shaded garden, front yard curb appeal, or small backyard seating. These details help the result match how you want to use the outdoor space.
It can suggest a visual planting direction, such as layered greenery, ornamental grasses, flowering beds, shrubs, or a cleaner evergreen structure. Exact plant species should still be checked against your USDA zone, sunlight, water needs, soil, local rules, and nursery availability.
Yes. For a front yard, focus your prompt on entry path, curb appeal, planting beds, porch, and house facade. For a backyard, focus on seating, privacy, shade, paths, lighting, and how people move through the space.
No. It is a visual concept from your photo. Use it to clarify direction, then confirm grading, drainage, irrigation, plant choice, and hardscape details with local professionals.