Alternatives
Best Galileo AI Alternatives in 2026
Galileo AI is a text-to-UI generator that turns natural-language prompts into editable high-fidelity interface designs and exports them to Figma — and it's now part of Google. It's aimed at designers and product teams who want to jump from idea to a workable UI draft fast, but because the product has been absorbed into Google and its standalone future is uncertain, it's especially worth knowing the alternatives below.
Why look for Galileo AI alternatives?
- → Galileo is now part of Google, so its standalone availability and roadmap are uncertain — you may want a tool you can rely on long-term.
- → You'd rather generate UI from sketches or screenshots, not only text prompts.
- → You already live in Figma and want AI assistance inside the same canvas instead of an export hand-off.
- → Your real need is diagramming, flows, and wireframes for planning rather than polished high-fidelity screens.
Uizard
Turning sketches and screenshots into editable UI
Figma AI
Designers who want AI inside Figma itself
Whimsical AI
Diagrams, flows, and low-fidelity wireframes
How they compare to Galileo AI
Each alternative wins on a different dimension. Skim the highlights below or click through for a full review.
Uizard — 4.4/5
Best for Turning sketches and screenshots into editable UI.
Uizard is the most direct alternative to Galileo AI for generating interface designs from a prompt, but it's more flexible about inputs: alongside text it can convert hand-drawn sketches and existing screenshots into editable high-fidelity wireframes and prototypes. That makes it a strong fit for early ideation and for teams who want to digitize whiteboard concepts quickly, whereas Galileo is primarily prompt-to-UI. Uizard keeps everything in its own editor and supports clickable prototypes, so you can test flows without leaving the tool, though its design fidelity and component control are generally lighter than a full professional design app. It also leans toward speed and approachability over deep customization, so polished, production-ready handoffs may still need refinement elsewhere. Compared with Galileo's Figma-export workflow, Uizard is more self-contained and accessible to non-designers. Choose Uizard if multi-input generation and built-in prototyping matter; choose Galileo if Figma is your destination and you only need text-to-UI.
Figma AI — 4.7/5
Best for Designers who want AI inside Figma itself.
Figma AI brings generative design features directly into Figma, the industry-standard design tool — which is exactly where Galileo AI sends its output anyway. The advantage is that there's no export hand-off: you generate, refine, and ship inside the same file alongside your existing components, libraries, and collaborators. For teams whose source of truth already lives in Figma, that integrated workflow is hard to beat and removes the round-trip Galileo requires. The tradeoff is that Figma's AI is one feature within a much larger, professional-grade app, so it carries Figma's learning curve and seat costs rather than being a focused idea-to-UI generator. Its AI capabilities are also still maturing relative to a dedicated text-to-UI engine, so prompt-driven generation may feel less central than it does in Galileo. Pick Figma AI if you're already a Figma shop and want generation native to your canvas; pick Galileo if you want a dedicated prompt-to-UI tool that simply exports there.
Whimsical AI — 4.3/5
Best for Diagrams, flows, and low-fidelity wireframes.
Whimsical is a visual workspace for flowcharts, wireframes, mind maps, and docs, with AI assistance — so it overlaps with Galileo AI mainly at the planning and low-fidelity end of design. Where Galileo produces high-fidelity, Figma-ready UI, Whimsical is about thinking through structure and flow quickly: mapping a user journey, sketching a rough screen layout, or brainstorming with AI-generated diagrams. It's a better fit for product managers and teams in the ideation phase than for designers who need pixel-accurate, component-based screens. Its wireframes are intentionally rough and unstyled, so it won't produce the realistic mockups Galileo is built to generate. The two can even be complementary, with Whimsical for early structure and a high-fidelity tool for the final UI. Choose Whimsical when diagramming and lightweight wireframes are the goal; choose Galileo when you need polished interface mockups ready to refine in Figma.
Other Galileo AI alternatives worth knowing
Well-known options that don't yet have a full ToolChase review.
Visily ↗
Visily is an AI-powered UI design tool that turns text prompts, sketches, and screenshots into editable wireframes and mockups, positioned as an accessible option for non-designers and product teams.
v0 by Vercel ↗
v0 generates UI from natural-language prompts and outputs working React and Tailwind code, making it a developer-leaning alternative for teams that want shippable front-end components rather than design files.
Framer ↗
Framer combines AI-assisted layout generation with a full website builder, letting teams go from prompt to a published, responsive site rather than handing designs off to a separate build step.
Builder.io Visual Copilot ↗
Builder.io's Visual Copilot converts designs and prompts into production code and integrates with Figma, appealing to teams that want to bridge design and front-end development rather than stop at mockups.