Midjourney V6 removed the ability to generate UI mockups and website designs. That was the right call: it's an image generation tool, not a design tool, and pretending otherwise wasn't doing anyone favours.
What remains is genuinely good. V8, released early 2026, generates images roughly 5x faster than V7, adds native video up to 10 seconds at 60fps, and improved text rendering enough that short labels are sometimes usable. The aesthetic quality — mood, composition, the feeling a generated image carries — is still unmatched at this price point.
For designers, the most defensible use is early-stage visual direction. A strong Midjourney prompt can communicate a vibe to a client more efficiently than a moodboard assembled from stock photography, and the entry tier is $10/month.
The Character Reference flag (--cref) locks visual identity across styles, useful for anything requiring consistency across multiple generated images. All paid plans include commercial rights, which remains less common than it should be at this price.
The gaps are worth knowing upfront. No official API, so no programmatic use without risking a ban. Output is PNG raster only. Text rendering is improved but still unreliable beyond a word or two. And despite the web interface maturing considerably from the Discord-era workflow, there is no path from a Midjourney image to a design file.
Basic is $10/month for around 200 fast images. Standard is $30 for 900 fast plus unlimited Relax-mode generation. Pro is $60 and adds Stealth mode for private client work.
Midjourney V6 removed the ability to generate UI mockups and website designs. That was the right call: it's an image generation tool, not a design tool, and pretending otherwise wasn't doing anyone favours.
What remains is genuinely good. V8, released early 2026, generates images roughly 5x faster than V7, adds native video up to 10 seconds at 60fps, and improved text rendering enough that short labels are sometimes usable. The aesthetic quality — mood, composition, the feeling a generated image carries — is still unmatched at this price point.
For designers, the most defensible use is early-stage visual direction. A strong Midjourney prompt can communicate a vibe to a client more efficiently than a moodboard assembled from stock photography, and the entry tier is $10/month.
The Character Reference flag (--cref) locks visual identity across styles, useful for anything requiring consistency across multiple generated images. All paid plans include commercial rights, which remains less common than it should be at this price.
The gaps are worth knowing upfront. No official API, so no programmatic use without risking a ban. Output is PNG raster only. Text rendering is improved but still unreliable beyond a word or two. And despite the web interface maturing considerably from the Discord-era workflow, there is no path from a Midjourney image to a design file.
Basic is $10/month for around 200 fast images. Standard is $30 for 900 fast plus unlimited Relax-mode generation. Pro is $60 and adds Stealth mode for private client work.