PlanSnapper

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PlanSnapper vs Floorplanner: Which Tool Should You Use?

PlanSnapper and Floorplanner both deal with floor plans, but they solve completely different problems. Floorplanner is a tool for drawing floor plans from scratch. PlanSnapper is a tool for measuring and calculating square footage from a floor plan you already have. If you are choosing between them, the answer usually comes down to one question: do you need to create a floor plan, or measure one?

The short version

PlanSnapper vs Floorplanner: at a glance

PlanSnapperFloorplanner
Primary useMeasure GLA from existing floor planDraw new floor plans from measurements
InputUpload PDF or image of existing planEnter room dimensions manually
OutputSquare footage, GLA calculationDrawn floor plan, 3D renders
ANSI GLA supportYes — core featureNo — not appraisal-focused
Appraisal useYes — built for itNo
Time to resultUnder 2 minutes15–60 min (depends on complexity)
PricingFree (5 uses) / $9 day / $29 moFree limited / ~$14–29/mo
Best forAppraisers, agents verifying sq ftAgents, designers creating new plans

What Floorplanner does well

Floorplanner is a polished browser-based drawing tool. You drag and drop walls, place doors and windows, and can switch between 2D and 3D views. For real estate agents who want a clean floor plan for a listing presentation, it works well. For interior designers or home stagers, the 3D rendering is a genuine selling point.

The free tier is limited to one project with basic features. Most serious use cases require the paid plan.

What PlanSnapper does differently

PlanSnapper does not draw floor plans. It measures them. Upload any floor plan image — a CubiCasa scan, a builder PDF, a screenshot from MLS — trace the perimeter, set a known wall length, and get square footage immediately. It handles multiple rooms, separate levels, and produces ANSI-compliant GLA totals that hold up in an appraisal.

The workflow is designed to take under 2 minutes on a simple property. You are not building a drawing — you are getting a number from a plan that already exists.

Can you use both?

Yes, and they complement each other. An agent might use Floorplanner to create a polished floor plan for a listing — then use PlanSnapper to verify the square footage before it goes live. An appraiser might receive a Floorplanner-generated plan from an agent and use PlanSnapper to calculate the defensible GLA.

When to choose Floorplanner

When to choose PlanSnapper

Already have the floor plan?

Upload any floor plan PDF or image and get accurate square footage in minutes.

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