05-25-2026 – Design
Figma’s new agentic design tool is like getting an ultra-fast coworker.


With the update, Figma is fundamentally reengineering the digital drafting board into an autonomous engine. By throwing the gates wide open—inviting the  marketing department, code-wranglers, and project supervisors to play architect—the company is reshaping the very definition of who gets to be a creator.

HOW DO FIGMA’S AGENTS WORK?

Unlike  other AI-powered UX exploration tools that create user interfaces using an isolated, sterile chat window that results in different screens for your app, Figma’s agentic design product is much more granular and offers what appears to be full control of individual elements down to every radial button and icon.

The natural language tool is embedded directly into Figma’s workspace and its elements. When you click on an app screen in your canvas, a star appears next to it, signaling that you can adjust the visuals with natural language. You just tell it what to do on the interface element you are working on. 

It’s not only about making incremental adjustments, however. You can prompt the agent to generate initial design layers, explore multiple visual directions, change color palettes to one element or screen, or many, globally. It can handle the tedious work of formatting components, sometimes in bulk, like changing the spacing in the progress bar mentioned before and all the progress bars in your app. 


Teams can deploy multiple agents simultaneously alongside their human colleagues, all of them working in tandem, controlled by different users. And crucially, the AI continuously reads the room, which means that it is constantly referencing your existing design system logic and the ongoing conversations right on the canvas, while you seamlessly toggle between typing commands and manually manipulating the design.

THE AGENT TRADEOFF

The tool will undoubtedly be a time saver for seasoned designers. It will also be a way for non-designers to start designing. In theory, that’s awesome. Yet, this democratization is as terrifying as it’s exciting.

Much like generative video, handing AI design powers to non-creatives could lead to brilliant creations by those with a clear idea, but no skills or money to pay someone to execute it. But also it could be a fast track to a reality where the delicate art and science of  product design is diluted into an endless ocean of sanitized, algorithmic sludge.