Compare/Figma AI Auto-Layout and Component Generation vs Lunagraph

AI tool comparison

Figma AI Auto-Layout and Component Generation vs Lunagraph

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

F

Design & Creative

Figma AI Auto-Layout and Component Generation

Text-to-design on the canvas, auto-layout suggestions built in

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Figma's AI-powered auto-layout suggestions and component generation features are now generally available to all Professional and Organization plan subscribers. Users can generate design components directly from text prompts on the canvas, and receive intelligent auto-layout recommendations as they design. This represents Figma's most significant native AI integration, bringing generative capabilities into the core design workflow rather than a separate surface.

L

Design Tools

Lunagraph

Design canvas powered by Claude Code — the deliverable is the code

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Lunagraph flips the traditional design-to-code workflow on its head. Instead of designing in Figma and handing off to developers to rebuild in code, Lunagraph is a canvas where designers, product managers, developers, and AI agents all work together — and the output is real HTML, CSS, and React code from the start. What you see on the canvas is literally what ships. Powered by Claude Code, Lunagraph enables cross-functional teams to collaborate without the handoff tax. The design file isn't a blueprint for code — it is the code. Designers can drag and modify components while developers extend them without a translation layer. AI agents can participate in the same canvas alongside humans, making changes that immediately reflect in production-ready output. This approach targets a real coordination cost: the average design-to-engineering handoff introduces bugs, inconsistencies, and days of rework. Lunagraph's bet is that if design and code are the same artifact, that cost disappears. Whether teams will actually adopt a new canvas tool to achieve this is the harder question — but the direction is clearly where the industry is heading.

Decision
Figma AI Auto-Layout and Component Generation
Lunagraph
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Included in Professional ($16/mo per editor) and Organization ($45/mo per editor) plans; not available on Starter/free tier
Contact for pricing
Best for
Text-to-design on the canvas, auto-layout suggestions built in
Design canvas powered by Claude Code — the deliverable is the code
Category
Design & Creative
Design Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Designer
78/100 · ship

The auto-layout suggestion engine is the genuinely interesting part here — it reads your existing frame structure and proposes constraint relationships that would have taken three extra clicks to set manually, and the suggestions are almost always contextually appropriate rather than generic. Component generation from text is more variable: the output respects Figma's own component architecture (variants, properties, slots) rather than dumping a flat group, which tells me the team actually thought about how designers use what gets generated. Where it wobbles is the editing surface post-generation — restyling generated components requires jumping into the component definition, which breaks the inline flow that makes this feel native. The specific decision that earns the ship: generated components land as real Figma components with auto-layout already applied, not as bitmaps or ungrouped shapes.

No panel take
Creator
72/100 · ship

What Figma gets right that most generative design tools miss is that the output doesn't feel like a render — it feels like a starting point a designer actually made. Generated components use your document's existing text styles and color variables when they're present, so the output lands inside your taste system rather than overriding it. The fingerprint problem is real though: prompt-generated layouts have a recognizable symmetry and card-density that signals AI origin to anyone who's seen a few, and there's no randomization or style-injection control to break that pattern. The craft decision that earns the ship is variable binding — generated components respect local variable collections instead of hardcoding values, which means you can actually hand these off without a cleanup pass.

80/100 · ship

As someone who's spent years exporting assets and writing specs for engineers, working directly in code-backed components is genuinely exciting. The learning curve is real, but designing in production-quality React beats pixel-pushing by a wide margin.

Skeptic
55/100 · skip

This is gated behind Professional at $16/editor/month, which means the solo designers and students who would experiment most are locked out, and the professionals who can afford it already have muscle memory that makes AI layout suggestions feel like an interruption, not a feature. The direct competitor here isn't another AI tool — it's the designer's own brain after two years of using auto-layout daily, and that's a very hard job to take. The scenario where this breaks is any design system with established component conventions: the generator doesn't know your naming schema, your variant taxonomy, or your token hierarchy, so everything it produces is a stub that needs renaming before it's mergeable. What kills this in 12 months: Figma ships a more aggressive version that actually reads your existing component library before generating, making this GA release look like a placeholder.

45/100 · skip

Every design-to-code tool in the last five years has promised 'what you see is what ships.' They all hit the same wall: real production code has business logic, state management, and edge cases that don't belong in a canvas. Fine for landing pages, limited for anything serious.

Founder
74/100 · ship

The pricing architecture here is smart in a way that most AI feature launches aren't: there's no new SKU, no consumption billing, no AI add-on that creates a separate budget conversation — it's bundled into the plans that already have a purchase order in the finance system. That means adoption happens without a procurement cycle, which is the actual blocker for enterprise AI features. The moat is straightforward: this AI is trained on Figma's own design corpus and is deeply aware of Figma's internal data model (components, variants, auto-layout constraints) in a way that a standalone tool couldn't replicate without years of integration work. The business risk is that Figma is essentially raising the floor of what free tools have to offer, which compresses their own competitive moat against Penpot and open-source alternatives — but that's a 36-month problem, not a today problem.

No panel take
Builder
No panel take
80/100 · ship

Zero-handoff is real engineering value. If designers are working in actual React components, the diff between design and prod collapses. Claude Code as the underlying engine means complex component logic is accessible from the canvas, not just styling tweaks.

Futurist
No panel take
80/100 · ship

The convergence of design tools and AI coding agents is inevitable. Lunagraph is early, but a unified surface where humans and agents collaborate on the same code artifact is exactly where this goes. Figma will copy this if Lunagraph doesn't scale first.

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