Canva eyes $4.7B AI coding market as universal design finisher
Canva is extending an AI website builder to its 265 million users, aiming to capture design value from a booming market even when the code is generated by rivals.
Canva launched Code 2.0 on Tuesday, extending an AI-powered coding tool across all pricing tiers, including free accounts. The upgrade allows the company’s 265 million monthly users to build interactive websites and applications using plain-language prompts, then edit them visually.
The release targets a rapidly expanding sector. According to May 2026 research from Luminix AI, the vibe coding and AI app builder market is estimated at $4.7 billion this year and is growing at 38 percent annually, with projections reaching $12.3 billion in 2027. AI-generated code now comprises approximately 41 percent of all code written globally.
The competitive landscape is crowded and highly valued. Lovable has reportedly reached about $400 million in annual recurring revenue, while Replit has tripled its valuation to $9 billion. Bolt.new scaled from $4 million to $40 million in ARR within months of launching.
Rather than competing solely on code generation, Canva is betting the bottleneck for non-technical users is visual polish. "Most vibe coding tools stop at functional," the company stated. Canva has reduced code generation time by 75% and cut the time from prompt to published site by 30%, driving a 25% increase in active Code users.
The most strategically significant addition is HTML import. Users can take code generated by rivals like ChatGPT, Claude, Lovable, or Bolt and edit it inside Canva's drag-and-drop interface, utilizing a library of over 120 million assets. Head of AI Products Danny Wu stated the goal is to make Canva "the most accessible and the most pluggable" platform.
This approach mirrors Canva’s existing strategy of importing PowerPoint and PDF files to pull users into its ecosystem. If successful, Canva captures value from the entire AI coding category without needing to win the generation race outright.
However, Wu acknowledged the product's limits, noting it suits front-end apps at a small to medium scale. "Canva Code is probably not going to be suitable if you're trying to build a website with complex backends, or if you're handling hundreds of thousands of visitors per day," he said.