

Front Yard Curb Appeal
Cleaner entry planting, gravel edges, path lighting, and a calmer arrival view.
Plants
- Texas sage
- Gulf muhly
- Dwarf yaupon holly
Materials
- Decomposed granite
- Steel edging
- Low-voltage path lights

Start with a real front yard, backyard, patio, or garden photo. Get a free visual preview first, then unlock the full yard plan when the direction feels useful.


Front Yard Curb Appeal
A cleaner entry with layered native shrubs, gravel edges, warm path lighting, and a defined seating nook near the porch.
Get a free preview first. Unlock the full report only if the direction is useful.
Requires sign-in, 1 credit, and a real uploaded yard photo. Includes GPT-Image-2 visuals saved to your report.
Upload a real yard photo before using a Design Pack credit.
The plan starts from your actual layout, not a generic stock yard.
Set the area, budget, style, climate, and must-have goal.
Review the direction first, then unlock the full report when it helps.
Preview first, upgrade when it is useful
Most visitors only need to see whether the direction makes sense. Upgrade when you want a saved report, generated visuals, and a contractor-ready brief.
Best for checking whether the layout, style, and budget direction are worth exploring.
Best when you want to save, export, compare quotes, or share a clearer plan with someone else.
What this page helps you decide
What your report can include
Sample focus
General yard planning starts with the area, goal, budget, and climate before producing a preview and report.
Sample homeowner report


A cleaner entry with layered native shrubs, gravel edges, warm path lighting, and a defined seating nook near the porch.
$4,000-$9,000
Planning range only. Verify labor, permits, and plant suitability locally.
Upgrade path
Full reports can include high-resolution visuals, PDF export, a shopping list, and a contractor brief that keeps everyone aligned.
Before / after gallery
Drag each slider to compare the same outdoor space before and after. The changes focus on planting, paving, lighting, seating, and edges a homeowner can actually plan.


Cleaner entry planting, gravel edges, path lighting, and a calmer arrival view.


Outdoor dining, privacy planting, a paver zone, and a phased build plan.


Container plants, brighter dining layout, bistro lighting, and low-cost surface updates.


Native perennials, drip irrigation, mulch depth, and a simple seasonal maintenance rhythm.
Contractor-ready planning
Many tools stop at a render. Yard Plan AI should help homeowners clarify scope, material direction, budget assumptions, and next steps before they contact a contractor.
The area, goal, style, budget tier, and site risks are written in one contractor-friendly block.
Plants, hardscape, lighting, mulch, edging, and finishes are separated so estimates are easier to compare.
Drainage, grading, utilities, irrigation, access, and permit assumptions are called out before money is spent.
Weekend tasks are separated from work that may need equipment, site verification, or a licensed pro.
Estimate cost before you plan
These pages give users budget ranges first, then route them into the real-photo report workflow.
Start from the page closest to the yard problem you are trying to solve.
Use a clear daytime photo that shows the main area you want to improve, such as the entry, lawn, patio, garden bed, or fence line.
Yes. Sample reports are included so you can see the planning format before using a real photo.
The Design Pack path focuses on a fuller plan: shopping list, contractor brief, DIY phases, PDF-ready report, and higher-resolution visual direction.
YARD PLAN AI