How Social Media and AI Are Impacting Home Design Projects

Design
Published

Every home design consultation begins with trying to understand the wants and needs of the home owner, hopefully with some inspiration photos from the client. But what happens when those inspo images aren’t real?

With the advancements in AI and its entrance into the mainstream, this has become more of a reality for designers. It’s likely happened to us all in one way or another: An image online looks normal, but upon further inspection, the background elements are slightly off, and the colors appear less realistic. We realize it’s entirely AI-generated.

Social media has sped up the lifespan of home design trends and developed its own trend terminology for many of them. For designers and contractors, this challenge comes to a head in a variety of ways.

“I feel like in the last three or four years, Instagram and all these social media trends have become like the Bible of what’s ‘in’ in the system,” says Modern Splendor Homes Co-Owner Matthew Segerstrom.

The luxury custom builder based in Arizona works on developing and constructing projects for several years, and for some clients, that could be challenging when wanting to stick with what’s hot.

“We do have a client right now that is questioning a lot of her design choices because she designed it a year or so ago, and she is very on-trend,” says Modern Splendor Co-Owner Kelly Segerstrom. 

Now with AI in the mix, the hard-to-keep-up environment online has added another level of complexity with some designers spotting these unrealistic — and unreal — images of homes with extravagant features that may be even harder to keep up with as more prospective clients gain access to them.

This article is excerpted from the November/December 2023 issue of Pro Remodeler and was part of a larger article on 2024 design trends. Caroline Broderick, managing editor of Pro Remodeler, recently shared these trends as part of NAHB’s Remodeling Forecasts, Myths & Trends video series.

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from NAHBNow

Advocacy | Environment

May 26, 2026

EPA Finalizes Refrigerant Rule Update to Allow Older HVAC Unit Installation

The EPA today published a final rule that will allow the continued installation in new homes of existing HVAC units manufactured or imported prior to Jan. 1, 2025, that use R-410A refrigerant until existing supplies are depleted.

Business Management

May 26, 2026

NAHB Publication Offers Remodelers Sneak Peek into Industry Financials

BuilderBooks, the publishing arm of NAHB, released a new edition of its Remodelers’ Cost of Doing Business Study, 2026 Edition, a national study of remodelers’ business practices and financial performance.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

May 26, 2026

First Quarter 2026 Multifamily Construction Data

According to NAHB analysis of quarterly Census data, the count of multifamily, for-rent housing starts increased year-over-year during the first quarter of 2026. For the quarter, 107,000 multifamily residences started construction.

Economics

May 25, 2026

Custom Home Building – A Bright Spot for Construction

With overall single-family construction down 5% for the first four months of 2026, custom home building has been a relative bright spot. The custom building market is less sensitive to the interest rate cycle than other forms of home building but is more sensitive to changes in household wealth and stock prices.

Economics

May 25, 2026

Single-Family Built-to-Rent Slowed at Start of 2026

Single-family built-for-rent (or built-to-rent, BTR) construction fell back in the first quarter of 2026, as a higher cost of financing, increased multifamily supply and policy concerns over Congressional legislation related to institutional capital froze parts of the development market.