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What it does

The Wall Color Changer uses AI to realistically repaint your walls in any color — while keeping everything else in the room (furniture, decor, lighting) exactly the same. The result shows a photorealistic preview of your room with the new color applied.

Credit cost

ActionCredits
Generate a color preview1 credit

Free vs paid plan access

The full color picker (color wheel and custom hex code input) is a paid plan feature. Free users can select from the preset color swatches only. Upgrade to Pro or Premium to unlock any color.

How to use it

1

Upload your room photo

Upload a clear photo of the room showing the walls you want to change.
2

Choose a color

Free plan: Select from preset color swatches — a curated set of popular paint tones organized by family (neutrals, warm, cool, bold).Pro & Premium: Full access to all three color selection methods:
  • Preset swatches — popular paint colors organized by tone
  • Color picker — click the color wheel to choose any exact shade
  • Hex code — paste a specific color code (e.g. #F5E6D3) from a paint brand’s website
3

Generate

Click Apply Color. The AI will render your room with the new wall color in 10–20 seconds.

Reading the result

The output shows a before/after split view:
  • Left half: your original room (grayscale reference)
  • Right half: your room with the new wall color applied
This makes it easy to judge how the color changes the feel of the space.

Tips for best results

Photograph walls straight-on when possible. Angled shots still work, but flat wall shots give the most accurate color rendering.
  • Shoot in daylight or with consistent room lighting — the AI respects your room’s natural light and shadow
  • Avoid photos with strong colored light sources (colored lamps can affect how the rendered color looks)
  • If you want to test multiple colors, each generation costs 1 credit — test your top 3–4 options before committing

Common use cases

  • Testing paint colors before buying
  • Comparing warm vs cool tones in the same room
  • Checking how accent walls look against existing furniture
  • Previewing bold or dark colors you wouldn’t normally risk