Uizard exists for a specific person: the product manager, startup founder, or non-designer who needs something that looks like a real interface before the designer is involved. It's not trying to compete with Figma, and it doesn't pretend to. It's trying to get a rough prototype out of someone's head and into a shareable form in under an hour.
Miro acquired Uizard in 2024, which positioned it as a companion to Miro's whiteboarding workflow rather than a standalone product. The combination makes some sense: ideation happens in Miro, Uizard turns that into a clickable mockup. Whether the integration depth matches the strategic logic is a question the product still hasn't fully answered.
The core features work. Type a description of a product and Autodesigner generates a multi-screen UI prototype. Take a photo of a hand-drawn sketch and Uizard converts it to editable mockup screens. Upload a screenshot of an existing app and get an editable recreation. The AI chatbot lets you iterate on what's been generated: "make this more minimal" or "add a navigation bar" tend to produce reasonable results. For someone who has never opened a design tool, the access point is genuinely low.
The problem is what happens after. The output is generic in a way that's hard to work around. Components are usable but not refined, and the customization ceiling is lower than tools designed for actual designers. There's no Figma export, which means anything created in Uizard has a hard stop: you can share a prototype link, but you can't pass the file downstream to a designer who works in Figma. That's a meaningful limitation for teams where product and design need to hand off to each other.
Code export exists via a Handoff feature that outputs React and CSS, but reviewers note it's more useful as a starting point than production code.
The pricing is accessible. Free covers 2 projects with 3 AI generations per month, which is enough to evaluate it. Pro is $12 per month and unlocks unlimited screens and full AI access.
For working designers, Uizard probably isn't the tool. For the non-designer stakeholder who needs something to put in front of a client or investor before a designer gets involved, it does the job with less friction than most alternatives. Visily and UX Pilot occupy similar territory with slightly different feature sets, and all three are worth a quick trial before committing to one.
Uizard exists for a specific person: the product manager, startup founder, or non-designer who needs something that looks like a real interface before the designer is involved. It's not trying to compete with Figma, and it doesn't pretend to. It's trying to get a rough prototype out of someone's head and into a shareable form in under an hour.
Miro acquired Uizard in 2024, which positioned it as a companion to Miro's whiteboarding workflow rather than a standalone product. The combination makes some sense: ideation happens in Miro, Uizard turns that into a clickable mockup. Whether the integration depth matches the strategic logic is a question the product still hasn't fully answered.
The core features work. Type a description of a product and Autodesigner generates a multi-screen UI prototype. Take a photo of a hand-drawn sketch and Uizard converts it to editable mockup screens. Upload a screenshot of an existing app and get an editable recreation. The AI chatbot lets you iterate on what's been generated: "make this more minimal" or "add a navigation bar" tend to produce reasonable results. For someone who has never opened a design tool, the access point is genuinely low.
The problem is what happens after. The output is generic in a way that's hard to work around. Components are usable but not refined, and the customization ceiling is lower than tools designed for actual designers. There's no Figma export, which means anything created in Uizard has a hard stop: you can share a prototype link, but you can't pass the file downstream to a designer who works in Figma. That's a meaningful limitation for teams where product and design need to hand off to each other.
Code export exists via a Handoff feature that outputs React and CSS, but reviewers note it's more useful as a starting point than production code.
The pricing is accessible. Free covers 2 projects with 3 AI generations per month, which is enough to evaluate it. Pro is $12 per month and unlocks unlimited screens and full AI access.
For working designers, Uizard probably isn't the tool. For the non-designer stakeholder who needs something to put in front of a client or investor before a designer gets involved, it does the job with less friction than most alternatives. Visily and UX Pilot occupy similar territory with slightly different feature sets, and all three are worth a quick trial before committing to one.