Stitch
- Category
- AI design-to-code
- Publisher
- Google (Google Labs)
- Pricing
- Preview (no public paid tier)
- Inputs
- Mockups, screenshots, prompts
- Output
- Front-end code (HTML, CSS, components)
- Availability
- Web — sign-in may be required
Stitch is Google’s experiment in closing the gap between visual design and shippable UI. You describe what you want or bring a design artifact, and Stitch generates structured front-end code you can refine in your editor or hand to an agent.
The Problem It Solves
Design-to-code tools have a long history of producing markup developers throw away. Stitch targets the same bottleneck — translating layout, hierarchy, and styling from design into code — with models tuned for interface structure so the first pass is closer to something you would actually build on.
How It Fits Your Workflow
Use Stitch as a fast starting point for screens and components, then iterate in your stack with the same review and testing you already use. It sits alongside AI coding assistants rather than replacing them: Stitch emphasizes the design-to-implementation step; your editor and agents handle integration, data, and production hardening.
What to Expect
- Google Labs preview — features and access can change; check the official site for the latest.
- High layout fidelity — strong candidate for landing pages, dashboards, and marketing sections when you need code quickly.
- Ecosystem angle — useful if you already live in Google’s design and cloud tooling and want a smoother handoff into code.
For more context on the launch, see our coverage of Google Stitch.