
“Our front was builder-grade lawn and one sad shrub. Seeing a planted entry path made the to-do list obvious to us.”
Photograph the front of your house and see it redone. Try a new entry path, a planted driveway edge, or a low-water curb, and compare the looks side by side.
Homeowners, DIYers, sellers & landscapers




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The front yard is the first thing anyone sees.
A new path, planting, and driveway edge placed on your actual house, so you can judge the first impression before you spend.
Sellers plan a front-yard refresh that photographs well, so a small spend earns its place on the listing.
Shoot the house from the curb, pick a direction, and get several redesigns back in seconds.
Modern, cottage, desert, Mediterranean, and more, applied to a photo of your actual front yard, not a stock one.































One shot from the curb is usually enough.
Stand at the curb and get the house, the front path, and the driveway in one frame.
Match the architecture, then choose planting and hardscape that suit it. Modern, cottage, desert, and more.
Get several redesigns of your real front so you can rule looks out before a resale push or a project.
What front-yard redesign actually has to get right.

The walk to the door and the driveway border carry most of the curb appeal. It redesigns both on your real house, not a stock facade, so the layout reads true.

A craftsman and a modern build want different fronts. Pick a style and the planting and hardscape stay in step with the architecture, not a generic render.

Keep each front-yard concept together, compare looks side by side, and send the favorite to a contractor or your agent.
Dozens of design styles for any outdoor space, ready in under a minute.
Real front-yard projects, from curb appeal to resale.

“Our front was builder-grade lawn and one sad shrub. Seeing a planted entry path made the to-do list obvious to us.”

“Before listing, I showed sellers a refreshed front on their own photo. The small spend it justified moved the home.”

“We went low-water out front and skipped the lawn. Comparing two looks settled it in one evening, no mowing at all.”
For agents and pros generating client front-yard concepts at volume, with team access.
The usual ways to plan a front yard, and where each one leaves you.
| Feature | Landscape designer | Design software | Guessing | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Getting to a design | ||||
| See it on your actual yard | ||||
| First design in under a minute | ||||
| No skills or software to learn | ||||
| Try many styles cheaply | ||||
| Cost & commitment | ||||
| Typical cost to start | $ | $$$$ | $$ | Free |
| Time to a usable concept | ~1 min | 1-3 weeks | Hours | — |
| Locked into one direction | ||||
| Confidence | ||||
| Decide before you spend | ||||
| Share concepts with a pro | ||||
Short answers before you upload.
It redesigns the street-facing view: the entry path, driveway edge, and planting, so you can judge the first impression on your own house.
Yes. Sellers plan a front-yard refresh that photographs well for the listing, so a small spend can move the home faster.
It designs from your photo, so fixed structures like the driveway and porch stay. Changes happen around them.
Yes. Front yards often get the least care, so ask for low-upkeep plants and less lawn, and the plan adjusts.
OutdoorBrite is a paid product, with no free tier. Plans cost a fraction of hiring a designer and scale with how many designs you generate and the resolution you need.
Practical tools for planning a front yard, built around your own photo.
One photo from the curb. Pick a style. Concepts in seconds.