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Virtual staging for realtors — listing-ready in 30 seconds
The problem
Empty listings sit. Traditional staging costs $1,500-4,000 and takes a week. Meanwhile you're paying photography fees for a room with no furniture.
What we do for realtors
Upload, pick a style, download a photo-real staged image. MLS-compliant with AB 723 disclosure built in.
The numbers realtors care about
The workflow for realtors
- Shoot wide room photos during the listing appointment — daylight, corner angle, no tilt.
- Upload each room to the tool between appointments. No scheduling, no third party.
- Pick the style that matches the target buyer demographic — Neo-Chinese in SGV, Farmhouse in the exurbs, Scandinavian for young professionals.
- Download 2K images directly into your MLS listing. California users get AB 723 disclosure auto-applied.
- For Bright MLS / CRMLS, paste the pre-generated compliance caption into each photo description field.
A real example
A San Diego agent handling 6 coastal listings a quarter replaced her $18,000/year traditional staging vendor with a $49/month subscription. Her average days-on-market held flat; her per-listing margin went up $3,000.
Styles that work best for realtors
Ranked by what we see converting for this audience.
What realtors usually ask us first
Will MLS compliance auditors accept AI-staged photos?
Yes if you disclose correctly. California AB 723 requires an on-image label and listing-description disclosure — we apply the label automatically and generate the caption text. Bright MLS, CRMLS, and Stellar MLS have adopted similar rules; our download page produces compliant captions for each.
What if a buyer complains the photo doesn't match reality?
Virtual staging only restyles furniture and decor. Walls, windows, doors, floors, and camera angle are preserved — buyers walk into the same room, minus the staging. Show them the empty-room version on request; most MLSes let you upload both.
I shoot my own listings. Will AI photos look obviously fake?
Not if the source photo follows the 7 rules (corner angle, daylight, 24mm wide, no tilt). Bad input = obvious output. Good input = photo-real at listing resolution.