So, something wild just dropped in the design world: a leaked image shows a new Figma feature called “Websites.” Yep, right there in the file menu, next to your usual design files and FigJam boards.
No official announcement yet, and the original post that shared it online has already been deleted. Could be real, could be a prank? However, either way, it has the whole design community talking.
Is Figma stepping into the website builder arena? Are we about to go from pixel pushing to full-on publishing with no handoff? Let’s break down the rumor and what it could mean for the future.
What Is Figma’s New Website Feature in Alpha?
Figma is reportedly testing a new feature called "Figma Websites," though it’s still in alpha and only available to a select few. The details are scarce, but a leaked image hinted at a menu item for this tool.
If it’s real, you could design and publish a live website directly in Figma, and no coding or shifting is needed. Think of it as a no-code builder like Webflow or Framer, but built right into the design tool you already use.

Since it’s in alpha, expect bugs, unfinished features, and no promises it’ll even launch. Only a handful of people are testing it, and things could change or get scrapped entirely.
But if it rolls out, Figma wouldn’t just be for design anymore. It could become a full-fledged tool for building products, blurring the line between designing and launching. That’s a big shift, right?
Is Figma Targeting Framer and Webflow?
This move feels like a clear challenge to Framer and Webflow, the top no-code tools for turning designs into live sites. It seems like Figma is stepping into their territory, and it’s worth comparing how they stack up.
How Do They Compare?
Framer works great for websites, especially in animations, real-time publishing, and responsive design. On the other hand, Webflow offers pixel-perfect control, clean code exports, and a powerful CMS.
If Figma’s website feature is real, its biggest advantage is keeping everything in one place, designing and publishing without switching tools. But early versions might lack the depth of customization that Framer and Webflow offer.
What’s the Reaction?
Some people are excited about streamlining their workflow, while others worry Figma might lose its design-first focus. Also, some people are believing that it's a prank and disapoointed that Figma will never comeup with this feature. However, Design Agencies could see this as a win for speed, but developers might be skeptical if Figma limits advanced functionality.
Right now, Figma isn’t replacing these tools, but it’s definitely testing the waters. If it works, the game could change.
Will Designers Finally Get Grid and Flex Containers in Figma?
This leak has us hoping Figma might introduce real layout tools like CSS Grid and Flexbox. If that happens, it could bridge the gap between designers and developers, making collaboration smoother than ever.
Right now, Figma’s constraints are tedious, auto layout is limited, and responsive design still feels like a workaround. Proper Grid and Flex support would fix that by letting us build truly responsive layouts that adapt to any screen size, just like front-end code.
We must love to design with the same structure that devs use. This process will eliminate messy hacks and guesswork. It’d be a huge step toward aligning design and development logic. Fingers crossed this isn’t just a rumor, because it could completely change how we work in Figma.
Design to Live Site: The Dream Workflow
Now, after the leaked information, every designer has thought this at some point:
- “What if I could just hit publish after designing a page?”
- If “Figma Websites” is real, we might finally get there.
This could mean:
- Design > Publish, all inside Figma.
- No back and forth with developers.
- Real-time updates, version control, maybe even SEO controls.
But here's the catch: Will the published sites be production-ready or more like MVPs and portfolios? Also, what happens to handoffs? Will it die or evolve?
According to a X-post by Jane Manchun Wong, “Design responsively, use pre-built blocks, and add preset interactions—then launch with a click.”




So, either way, the dream workflow is one step closer. The question is: will it be good enough to trust for real-world launches?
Can Figma Be a No-Code Website Builder?
Figma stepping into the no-code world feels both exciting and uncertain. It’s always been the go-to tool for UI design, but actually building and publishing a website? That’s a completely different game.
A Different Kind of Challenge
Tools like Framer and Webflow have spent years fine-tuning the complex mix of design, responsiveness, interactivity, and code logic. Figma, on the other hand, has focused purely on design collaboration.
If it plans to let users build and publish sites, it’ll need to handle much more, from layout systems to real-world performance, hosting, and even SEO concerns.
What Designers Might Think?
For many designers, this could be a dream. You create the design and hit publish, all from the same space. No need to juggle multiple platforms or wait for a developer to bring your vision to life.
But if the experience feels limiting or if the results aren’t production-ready, it could also result in frustration instead of freedom.
The Big Question
Figma has the design part locked down. But building a reliable, flexible no-code builder? That’s a bold leap. Whether it can match the depth and control of other platforms remains to be seen, but it definitely has our attention.
What Does the “Figma Web” Mean for Freelancers and Agencies?
If Figma really lets you design and publish websites, it could shake up how freelancers and agencies work. One tool for everything means faster projects, simpler workflows, and potentially bigger profits.
Freelancers Could Win Big
In this case, freelancers can manage an entire website, from mockup to live site, without jumping between tools. You could charge more for end-to-end delivery and take on more clients thanks to quicker turnarounds. No more wrestling with exports, handoffs, or third-party builders.
Agencies Might Rethink Their Stack
Teams could streamline their toolset as the process makes onboarding easier and cutting out clunky dev handoffs. But there’s a catch: agencies that offer only Webflow or Framer services might suddenly find Figma as a competitor. But the advanced agencies that will instantly adapt to Figma Web have a greater chance of winning the match.
Now the question is, will this simplify workflows or just create new competition? Either way, freelancers and agencies should keep an eye on this. If it delivers, it could be huge. If not? Back to the usual grind.
Figma Config 2025: The Big Predictions
The hype is real; Figma’s biggest event of the year, Figma config 2025 could bring some major reveals. Here’s what everyone’s talking about.
What We Hope to See?
A full reveal (or at least a beta) of Figma Websites would be huge. We have got several leaked screenshots that we can’t completely deny as being fake.


Pair that with Grid/Flex layout tools to finally match how devs build, and maybe even built-in hosting or CMS features? That’s a game-changer.
What We’re Nervous About?
New features often mean higher prices. Will Figma stay accessible? And if they go all-in on websites, will core design tools get neglected? Nobody wants slower updates just because Figma’s chasing the next big thing.
If this feature is real, Figma Config 2025 will be the event to watch. Either it’s a bold new era or a risky bet.
Will Web Devs Be Replaced, Or Simply Empowered?
This one’s touchy. If designers can ship websites without writing code, where does that leave frontend developers?
Here are some more realistic facts:
- Devs won’t be replaced, but the boring UI work might be.
- Devs might shift focus to logic, performance, and backend.
- Clean code still matters. And let’s be honest, no no-code tool writes perfect code.
So if anything, this move could empower developers by reducing grunt work. That is, if Figma outputs code at all.
So, Is This Another Canva or Something Bigger?
Some folks are comparing this move to Canva, which is easy, fast, and aimed at casual creators. That makes sense. As we all know, the Canva vibes are:
- All-in-one platform.
- Simple site creation.
- Limited depth for pros.
But if Figma does it right, this could be bigger with features like:
- Flexible enough for designers.
- Powerful enough for small dev teams.
- Polished enough for serious brands.
So, will it be like Canva or something more serious? We’ll know by how deep Figma goes with customization and developer-friendliness.
How Could Figma’s Website Feature Evolve Plugins & APIs?
Let’s not forget Figma’s plugin ecosystem, it’s already massive. If “Websites” becomes real, plugin creators could have a field day.
If things go well, SEO tools, CMS integrations, or e-commerce blocks built right into Figma’s website builder. Analytics dashboards, form builders, even A/B testing, all the relevant plugins could turn Figma into a full-stack powerhouse. The ecosystem would explode.
But there’s a potential downside too:
- Will Figma lock down access to keep control?
- Could they restrict APIs or charge more for plugin devs?
- Might they build their own features to compete with third-party tools?
This feature could either supercharge the plugin world or make it harder for small developers to survive.
End Note
Right now, “Figma Websites” is just a leak. It might be real, it might be fake, but it’s definitely sparked a big conversation. If Figma truly steps into the no-code site space, it could reshape how designers, devs, and agencies work.
However, it also risks spreading too thin. We’ll have to wait for Config 2025 to know for sure. Until then, stay curious, and maybe don’t cancel your Webflow subscription just yet.