Extruda

Home / Blog / AI floor plan generator vs converter

Comparison

AI floor plan generator vs converter

"AI floor plan tool" covers two very different things. A generator designs new layouts from scratch — you give it constraints, it proposes plans. A converter takes a plan you already have and turns it into editable geometry, CAD, and 3D. Knowing which you need saves a lot of wasted searching.

AI floor plan generator

A generator is a design tool. Feed it a plot size, room program, or a brief, and it produces candidate layouts that don't exist yet. It's for the early, blank-slate stage of space planning — exploring options fast.

AI floor plan converter

A converter is a digitization tool. Give it an existing plan — image, PDF, or scan — and it detects the walls and rooms and turns them into editable geometry you can export as DXF/DWG or a 3D model. It doesn't invent a layout; it rebuilds one you already have. This is what vectorization does — and it's what Extruda is.

Side by side

 GeneratorConverter
InputConstraints / a briefAn existing plan
OutputNew candidate layoutsEditable CAD & 3D of a real plan
JobDesign / space planningDigitize & export
StageBlank-slate conceptYou already have a plan

Which do you need?

  • Designing a layout from nothing → a generator.
  • You have a plan and need CAD/3D → a converter like Extruda.
  • Both → generate a layout, then convert it for CAD, 3D, and renders.

Have a plan? Convert it.

Upload an existing 2D plan and get editable geometry, CAD, and 3D — in minutes.

Get early access →

Frequently asked questions

What is an AI floor plan generator?

An AI floor plan generator designs new layouts from scratch based on constraints like plot size, room counts, or a brief. It's a space-planning tool for coming up with plans that don't exist yet.

What is an AI floor plan converter?

A converter takes a floor plan you already have — an image, PDF, or scan — and turns it into editable geometry, CAD files, and 3D. It digitizes and extrudes an existing plan rather than inventing a new one. Extruda is a converter.

Which one do I need?

Use a generator when you're designing a layout from a blank slate. Use a converter when you already have a plan and need it as CAD or 3D. Some projects use both: generate a layout, then convert it for downstream work.

Can one tool do both?

They're different problems — designing versus digitizing — so tools usually specialize. Extruda focuses on high-quality conversion and export from existing plans.