How to use Framer 3.0 Agents to customize your website in minutes
What we hear most from people who buy a template then barely touch it: "I don't want to break it."
Since Framer 3.0, that fear has a structural answer.
Every change you or the agent makes happens on a branch, an isolated copy of your live project. Main stays where you left it, and every agent message has its own rollback point, so you can undo a single prompt, not a whole session. When you're happy, click Apply to main. Until then, the live site is untouched.
This isn't a power-user feature. It's just how the editor works now.
What the in-canvas agent handles well:
-> Rewriting copy site-wide to your positioning, every text block in one pass.
-> Image and logo swaps.
-> SEO pass: titles, meta descriptions, alt text across the project.
-> Responsive breakpoints for tablet and mobile. Used to eat hours.
-> Wiring and populating CMS collections, fields and items, not you.
-> Matching the template to a style system you already have.
The credit math: Free gives 500 credits a day, resetting every 24 hours. A real session (copy rewrite, responsive pass, CMS wiring) runs ~450 to 600 credits at base rate, so one sitting can use a day's free allowance. For multiple rounds without waiting overnight, Pro's 3,000 a month makes sense.
The honest limit, and the most useful part: the agent is strong at repeatable, well-specified, additive work. It's weak at taste, visual direction, original layouts, and positioning. It can execute a brief. It can't write one. What your site should feel like, what it says about your business, which sections earn their place: still human calls.
We build Framer templates for a living (Omakase, if that's useful). What works: a manual pass first (style tokens, real content, then sections), then hand the repeatable volume to the agent. You're directing both. The template isn't fragile.
Full step-by-step with the decision table for what to hand the agent vs keep human:
How to use Framer 3.0 Agents to customize your website in minutes
What we hear most from people who buy a template then barely touch it: "I don't want to break it."
Since Framer 3.0, that fear has a structural answer.
Every change you or the agent makes happens on a branch, an isolated copy of your live project. Main stays where you left it, and every agent message has its own rollback point, so you can undo a single prompt, not a whole session. When you're happy, click Apply to main. Until then, the live site is untouched.
This isn't a power-user feature. It's just how the editor works now.
What the in-canvas agent handles well:
-> Rewriting copy site-wide to your positioning, every text block in one pass.
-> Image and logo swaps.
-> SEO pass: titles, meta descriptions, alt text across the project.
-> Responsive breakpoints for tablet and mobile. Used to eat hours.
-> Wiring and populating CMS collections, fields and items, not you.
-> Matching the template to a style system you already have.
The credit math: Free gives 500 credits a day, resetting every 24 hours. A real session (copy rewrite, responsive pass, CMS wiring) runs ~450 to 600 credits at base rate, so one sitting can use a day's free allowance. For multiple rounds without waiting overnight, Pro's 3,000 a month makes sense.
The honest limit, and the most useful part: the agent is strong at repeatable, well-specified, additive work. It's weak at taste, visual direction, original layouts, and positioning. It can execute a brief. It can't write one. What your site should feel like, what it says about your business, which sections earn their place: still human calls.
We build Framer templates for a living (Omakase, if that's useful). What works: a manual pass first (style tokens, real content, then sections), then hand the repeatable volume to the agent. You're directing both. The template isn't fragile.
Full step-by-step with the decision table for what to hand the agent vs keep human: