Free ResourcesMay 20, 2026

Free Figma Plugins That Replace Paid Tools in 2026

Free Figma plugins that genuinely replace paid tools in 2026. Each plugin named with the paid tool it replaces and the dollar savings. No filler.

M
Mantlr Team
Author
·23 min read
Share ↗
Free Resources

<!--

IMAGE: HERO (cover image, 1600×900)

RENDER: A 16:9 dark-mode split-screen composition on #0E0F11. Left half labelled "Paid tools" in muted grey, showing logos/icons of Streamline ($240/yr), Shutterstock ($29/mo), remove.bg ($9/mo), Whimsical ($10/mo), Specify ($30/mo) stacked vertically with red dollar amounts beside each. Right half labelled "Free Figma plugins" in vermillion/accent color, showing matching free plugins: Iconify, Unsplash, Icons8 BG Remover, Autoflow, Tokens Studio Free. Subtle arrows connecting each paid tool to its free replacement. Bottom-left: small label "12 free plugins, ~$1,200/year saved" in mid-grey.

ALTERNATIVE: A single laptop mockup showing the Figma interface with the plugins sidebar open, displaying the 12 plugins in the list. Dark background with subtle gradient.

FILE: /images/blog/free-figma-plugins-replace-paid-tools-2026-hero.png

ALT TEXT: "Free Figma plugins that replace paid tools in 2026 — Iconify, Unsplash, Icons8, Autoflow, Tokens Studio, and more saving designers $1,200+ per year"

-->

You are a designer with limited budget and a long list of paid tools your workflow supposedly requires. Streamline icons for $240/year. Shutterstock for stock images at $29/month. Whimsical for user flow diagrams at $10/month. Tokens Studio Pro for design tokens at $39/month. After Effects for motion at $23/month. The math is brutal: a comprehensive paid design stack costs $1,500-2,500/year before you've even bought Figma. The good news for 2026: most of those paid tools have free Figma plugins that genuinely cover the same job, and the gap between free and paid keeps narrowing.

This guide is the list of free Figma plugins that actually replace paid tools, organized by what each one replaces and the specific dollar amount it saves you. Not "30 cool plugins" with no buying logic. Not paid-disguised-as-free plugins with $9/month upgrade prompts after the first export. The 12 free plugins where the free tier genuinely does the job, with honest notes on where the paid version still wins.

A note on the Figma plugin landscape in 2026 before the list. The Figma Community now has over 5,000 plugins; most of them haven't been updated since 2023 or solve problems you could do manually in 30 seconds. The plugins that survived 2025 are AI-augmented, actively maintained, and increasingly integrated with the broader 2026 stack (DTCG tokens, MCP servers, accessibility-first defaults). The plugins below are the ones working designers actually keep installed in 2026, not the ones with the most installs in the directory.

Skip to the comparison table for the short version. Read on for the reasoning behind each pick.

All 12 plugins in this guide are curated on Mantlr — with the paid tools they replace, honest free-tier limits, and direct install links.

Browse Figma Plugins on Mantlr →

12 free Figma plugins by what they replace

<!-- IMAGE: comparison table preview, alt text: "Free Figma plugins 2026 organized by paid tool replaced, dollar savings, and use case" -->

| Free plugin | Replaces | Paid tool cost | Use case |

|---|---|---|---|

| Iconify | Streamline, Nucleo | $99-240/year | Icon library inside Figma |

| Unsplash | Shutterstock, Adobe Stock | $29-30/month | Stock photo insertion |

| Icons8 Background Remover | remove.bg | $9-39/month | AI background removal |

| Autoflow | Whimsical, Lucidchart | $10-15/month | User flow diagrams |

| Stark (free tier) | Stark Pro | $60/year | Accessibility audits |

| axe for Designers | Premium contrast checkers | $30-100/year | WCAG compliance checks |

| Content Reel (Microsoft) | Faker.js workflows | Dev time saved | Mock data generation |

| Tokens Studio (free tier) | Specify, Supernova | $30-99/month | Design token management |

| html.to.design (free tier) | Anima, Locofy | $99-149/year | Website to Figma conversion |

| Spelll | Grammarly Premium | $144/year | Spelling/grammar in designs |

| Mesh Gradient | Premium gradient tools | $20-50 one-time | Gradient mesh generation |

| Figmotion | After Effects (basic motion) | $276/year (CC) | In-Figma motion design |

Combined yearly savings if you replace all paid tools: $1,200-2,500/year depending on which paid tools you currently use. Most working designers replace 4-7 of these, saving $400-900/year while keeping equivalent functionality.

How to read this list

Every plugin below ships in the same format: what it does, what paid tool it replaces, exactly where the paid version still wins (because the free tier never beats paid on everything), and who it is best for. No "the free version is just as good" claims when it isn't. The honest gaps matter; they tell you when to upgrade and when to stay free.

The 2026 reality: Figma's own free tier (Starter plan) limits you to 3 Figma files and 150 AI credits per day. The 12 plugins below all work on the free Figma plan. None of them require a paid Figma subscription to install or use. They are genuinely free plugins on a tool that is genuinely free at the entry tier.

1. Iconify

Best for: Any designer needing icons inside Figma | Replaces: Streamline ($240/year), Nucleo ($99/year), Heroicons Pro, FontAwesome Pro | License: Free, most icon sets MIT or OFL licensed

Iconify is the most comprehensive free icon library plugin in 2026 with access to 150+ open-source icon sets including Material Icons, Heroicons, Phosphor, Lucide, Tabler, Bootstrap Icons, Carbon, Remix, and Iconoir. The plugin searches across every collection simultaneously, lets you preview style variations (filled, outlined, duotone), and inserts icons as SVG or PNG directly into your Figma frame.

What makes Iconify the right pick over the paid alternatives: the open-source icon sets it ships are the same icon sets the React/Vue/Tailwind community uses in production. Phosphor and Lucide are the dominant 2026 icon libraries in shadcn/ui projects. Heroicons ships in Tailwind UI / Tailwind Plus. Using Iconify in design and matching icons in code is the smoothest design-to-engineering handoff available for icons.

Where the paid alternatives still win: Streamline's $240/year subscription unlocks 200,000+ icons in a single consistent house style, which matters if you need a unified custom icon set across an entire design system. Nucleo's $99/year unlocks downloadable icon packs you can ship as a brand asset. For most working designers in 2026, Iconify's free open-source sets cover everything except the "I need 100 custom icons in our brand's specific style" case.

2. Unsplash

Best for: Mockup photography, marketing visuals, prototype placeholders | Replaces: Shutterstock ($29-30/month), Adobe Stock ($29.99/month), Getty Images | License: Free (Unsplash License covers commercial use, no attribution required)

Unsplash for Figma inserts high-quality stock photos directly into your selected frame. The Unsplash License is one of the most permissive in stock photography: free for personal and commercial use, no attribution required, no per-use limits. For UI mockups, marketing prototypes, and any design that needs photography you do not need to credit, Unsplash is the default.

What makes Unsplash the right pick over paid alternatives: zero licensing friction. You search, you insert, you ship. No "do I need to attribute this" questions, no monthly download limits, no $30/month after the first 10 images. For most product UI work and marketing prototypes, Unsplash's library of 5M+ commercial-safe photos covers the use case completely.

Where the paid alternatives still win: Shutterstock and Adobe Stock have stronger editorial photography (real news events, specific cultural contexts, branded environments) and broader video assets. For brand campaigns that need photography matching a specific creative brief, the paid libraries give you control over crop, exclusivity, and image authenticity that Unsplash cannot match. For prototyping and UI mockups, Unsplash is enough.

Worth noting: Unsplash images can start to feel overused in design work because the same hero photos circulate widely. For brand-critical visuals, custom photography or a paid library is still the right move.

3. Icons8 Background Remover

Best for: Removing backgrounds from product photos, headshots, illustrations | Replaces: remove.bg ($9/month for 40 images), Photoshop ($23/month CC), Clipping Magic ($4/month) | License: Free with no signup or per-image limits

Icons8 Background Remover uses AI to remove image backgrounds directly inside Figma. The plugin is free, has no signup requirement, and no limits on the number of images you can edit. For product photography mockups, headshot cropping, and any image that needs a transparent background, this plugin replaces three different paid tools in one click.

What makes it the right pick over paid alternatives: zero friction. You drop the image into Figma, run the plugin, and the background is gone. No external uploads to remove.bg, no Photoshop round-trip, no monthly limits to track. The AI quality is comparable to remove.bg for standard product shots and headshots.

Where the paid alternatives still win: remove.bg's pro tier handles complex edge cases (fine hair, fur, transparent objects, motion blur) better than Icons8's plugin. Photoshop's Subject Select and Select and Mask features give pixel-level manual control that AI tools cannot match. For complex compositing work, you still want Photoshop. For the 90% of "I need this product photo without its background" cases, Icons8 BG Remover is enough.

4. Autoflow

Best for: User flow diagrams, prototype connections, journey maps | Replaces: Whimsical ($10-15/month per user), Lucidchart ($7.95/month), Miro paid features | License: Free, no signup required

Autoflow draws connection lines between Figma frames automatically. You select two frames, run the plugin, and arrows appear connecting them. The result is user flow diagrams and prototype maps built directly inside Figma without bouncing to Whimsical or Lucidchart for the flow part and then back to Figma for the design part.

What makes Autoflow the right pick over paid alternatives: it lives where your designs live. The friction of maintaining flow diagrams in a separate tool is meaningful, especially when designs change frequently. Autoflow updates connection lines when frames move, which is what makes user flow documentation actually stay current with the design.

Where the paid alternatives still win: Whimsical's strength is the broader documentation surface (sticky notes, mind maps, wireframes, project boards) plus the cleaner aesthetic for client-facing user flows. Lucidchart handles deeper diagram types (BPMN, ER diagrams, network topology). For user flow diagrams that live alongside your Figma designs, Autoflow is sufficient. For broader documentation, the paid alternatives still win.

5. Stark (free tier)

Best for: Quick contrast checks, vision simulation, focus order audits | Replaces: Stark Pro ($60/year for individuals, $144/year for teams) | License: Free tier covers core checks, paid tier unlocks team features

Stark is the most comprehensive accessibility plugin for Figma, with contrast checking, vision simulation (deuteranopia, protanopia, low vision), alt text suggestions, focus order visualization, and touch target sizing. The free tier covers the core checks individual designers need: WCAG 2.1 and 2.2 contrast checking, color-blindness simulation, and basic accessibility audits.

What makes Stark the right pick: the vision simulation alone changes how you think about color choices. Seeing your design through the eyes of someone with deuteranopia is the kind of visceral feedback that fixes color decisions faster than any contrast ratio number. Stark also integrates with Jira and Linear on paid plans for issue tracking.

Where the paid Stark Pro still wins: team features (shared accessibility libraries, organization-wide audits), bulk fixes (apply contrast fixes across an entire file in one click), and the developer handoff workflow with annotated accessibility specs. For most individual designers in 2026, the free tier is enough. For organizations shipping accessibility-critical products at scale, Stark Pro is worth the $60-144/year.

6. axe for Designers (by Deque)

Best for: WCAG compliance checks, accessibility audits aligned with developer tooling | Replaces: Various premium contrast checkers ($30-100/year combined) | License: Free (built by the team behind the axe developer testing engine)

axe for Designers is the Figma plugin from Deque, the team behind the axe testing engine that developers use to check accessibility in production code. The plugin runs the same checks against your Figma designs that axe runs against shipped code, which means you catch accessibility issues in design before they hit engineering.

What makes axe the right pick: the design-to-development consistency. When designers use axe in Figma and developers use axe-core in their CI/CD pipeline, the accessibility standard is the same across the workflow. This eliminates the "design looks accessible, code doesn't pass automated tests" gap that hits teams using different tools for design and development checks.

Where it falls short: less polished UI than Stark, narrower feature set (focused on WCAG checks rather than the broader accessibility tooling Stark provides). For teams already using axe in code, axe for Designers is the right complement. For teams that want a broader accessibility tool, Stark covers more ground.

7. Content Reel (Microsoft)

Best for: Mock data generation, realistic content for prototypes | Replaces: Faker.js workflows for design content, manual placeholder text wrangling | License: Free (built and maintained by Microsoft)

Content Reel inserts realistic placeholder data (names, addresses, phone numbers, emails, avatars, timestamps, product descriptions) into your Figma designs. The data randomizes intelligently, so your design shows different names, different lengths, and different photo variations instead of looking artificially perfect with identical placeholder text.

What makes Content Reel the right pick: stress-testing your design with realistic data variation reveals problems that placeholder lorem ipsum hides. A list with five "Jonathan Williamson Smith Jr." rows looks fine; the same list with one short name, one very long name, and three mid-length names exposes layout issues you'd otherwise discover after handoff.

The plugin is built and maintained by Microsoft, which means update cadence is reliable and the data quality is high. Custom strings let you add your own content sets for specific use cases (product names, internal terminology, brand-specific copy).

Where it falls short: not a replacement for real user research. Content Reel gives you variation, not actual customer behavior. For dashboards and tables, pair Content Reel with the Google Sheets plugin (free) for live data integration.

8. Tokens Studio (free tier)

Best for: Design token management, multi-theme systems, token-to-code workflows | Replaces: Specify ($30/month), Supernova ($79/month team), manual token management | License: Free tier covers basic token management, Pro tier ($39/month) unlocks Git sync and multi-file features

Tokens Studio is the dominant design token plugin in 2026 with full DTCG (Design Tokens Community Group) specification support. The free tier handles single-file token management: colors, typography, spacing, shadows, and motion tokens organized in a hierarchical structure, applied to Figma layers, and exportable to JSON for engineering handoff.

What makes Tokens Studio the right pick over paid alternatives: it works inside Figma where designs already live. Specify and Supernova are separate platforms requiring sync workflows. Tokens Studio's free tier handles the 80% case of "I have a design system and I want tokens organized properly" without leaving Figma.

Where Tokens Studio Pro ($39/month) and the paid alternatives still win: Git integration (sync tokens directly to your design system repository), multi-file support (use the same tokens across multiple Figma files), branching workflows (preview token changes before merging), and team collaboration features. For solo designers and small teams, the free tier is enough. For enterprise design systems with engineering integration, the Pro tier or Specify becomes worth the cost.

Tokens Studio also pairs well with Style Dictionary (free, Amazon's open-source token transformation tool) for cross-platform token output. See the free design system resources guide for the broader token toolchain context.

9. html.to.design (free tier)

Best for: Importing existing websites into Figma for redesigns or analysis | Replaces: Anima ($31/month), manual recreation work | License: Free tier covers basic conversions, paid tier ($14-29/month) unlocks unlimited conversions

html.to.design imports any live website into a fully-editable Figma file. The free tier covers a limited number of conversions per month (typically 3-5), which is enough for occasional competitor analysis or redesign starting points. The plugin preserves layout structure, text styles, colors, and most images.

What makes it the right pick over paid alternatives: starting from a competitor's actual layout (which you can then modify and improve) is dramatically faster than building wireframes from scratch when doing competitive analysis or "redesign of X" work. The free tier covers the casual use case completely.

Where the paid tier still wins: unlimited conversions, higher fidelity reconstruction, and the ability to convert design systems and patterns at scale. For agencies doing many redesigns, the $14-29/month tier pays back quickly.

10. Spelll

Best for: Catching typos and grammar errors in UI copy before handoff | Replaces: Grammarly Premium ($12/month for grammar checking) | License: Free, runs locally without external API calls

Spelll scans every text layer in your Figma file and highlights spelling and grammar mistakes. You can run it across selected frames or the entire file. The plugin catches the typos that have shipped to production from buttons, labels, modal copy, and microcopy in countless design files because the designer was looking at layout instead of language.

What makes Spelll the right pick: it runs inside the design tool, on the actual UI copy, before handoff. Grammarly catches the same errors in document writing but not in design files. The "before client presentation" use case is where Spelll consistently saves designers from embarrassment.

Where Grammarly Premium still wins: tone analysis, style suggestions, plagiarism detection, and the broader writing surface (emails, docs, slides). For pure spelling and grammar checks in design files, Spelll is sufficient.

11. Mesh Gradient

Best for: Modern gradient mesh effects, hero section backgrounds | Replaces: Mesh ($25 one-time), Mesher ($49 one-time), Photoshop gradient mesh workflows | License: Free, MIT

Mesh Gradient generates complex gradient meshes directly in Figma. The plugin handles the kind of multi-point color blending that became a defining visual treatment of 2024-2026 hero sections (think Stripe, Linear, Vercel marketing pages). Free, no signup, no per-export limits.

What makes it the right pick over paid alternatives: it ships directly to Figma as editable vector layers. The paid alternatives often produce PNG or SVG outputs you import; Mesh Gradient gives you vector layers you can keep editing.

Where the paid alternatives still win: more advanced controls over individual mesh points, animation of mesh gradients over time, and the broader feature set in standalone tools. For most gradient hero work, Mesh Gradient is enough.

12. Figmotion

Best for: In-Figma motion design for prototypes, microinteractions | Replaces: After Effects ($23/month via Adobe Creative Cloud) for basic UI motion | License: Free, MIT

Figmotion brings After Effects-style timeline animation directly into Figma. You select layers, set keyframes, define easing, and preview animations without leaving the design environment. For UI microinteractions, button states, and modal transitions, Figmotion ships the same result that After Effects produces at 0% of the cost and 10% of the learning curve.

What makes Figmotion the right pick over After Effects: it lives where your designs live. The handoff workflow is simpler (export to Lottie or video directly), and the learning curve is dramatically shorter for designers who don't need cinematic animation chops.

Where After Effects still wins: complex character animation, frame-by-frame work, heavy compositing, broadcast-quality output, and the deep plugin ecosystem (including the Bodymovin plugin that exports to Lottie). For UI motion in 2026, see also Jitter and Lottielab covered in the free motion design resources guide on Mantlr.

**Browse more Figma plugins and design resources in the Mantlr directory →**

How to actually build a free plugin stack in 2026

Decision framework based on what you do most:

If you build product UI (apps, dashboards, internal tools): Install Iconify, Unsplash, Content Reel, Stark (free), Spelll, Tokens Studio (free), and Figmotion. This covers icons, photography, mock data, accessibility, copy quality, design tokens, and motion. Total cost: $0. Total savings vs paid equivalents: $800-1,200/year.

If you build marketing sites and landing pages: Add Mesh Gradient, html.to.design (free tier), and Iconify on top of the UI stack. The hero section work (gradients, custom illustrations, varied imagery) typically needs more plugin support than product UI does.

If you work in accessibility-critical industries (healthcare, fintech, government): Run both Stark (free) and axe for Designers. The two plugins catch slightly different issues; running both before handoff is the cheapest accessibility insurance available.

If you manage a design system: Tokens Studio (free) is the entry point. Upgrade to Pro ($39/month) when you need Git sync with engineering. For deeper design system documentation, the broader free design system resources toolchain matters more than any single plugin.

If you compare Figma against alternatives: see the Figma vs Penpot comparison for the full design tool comparison including Penpot's native plugin equivalent functionality.

The most common mistake is installing 30+ plugins and slowing Figma down. The 12 above are the working set; install all of them if relevant to your work, but resist the urge to add more without removing something. Plugin bloat is a real performance cost in 2026.

What changed in 2025-2026 that matters

Three shifts in the Figma plugin landscape worth understanding:

AI plugins multiplied. UXPilot, Builder.io, Magic Patterns, and similar AI-driven plugins emerged as a new plugin category. Most of these are paid (free tiers are demo-only). The free AI plugins that work are usually AI features inside non-AI plugins (Icons8 BG Remover uses AI for background removal but the plugin itself is free).

Design tokens went native. Figma's built-in Variables system absorbed much of the basic token functionality. Tokens Studio Pro still wins for advanced workflows (Git sync, multi-file, complex inheritance), but for simple token management, Figma's native Variables now cover what required a paid plugin two years ago.

Plugin performance became a concern. Figma's free Starter plan caps you at 3 files and 150 AI credits per day; heavy plugins eat into both. The plugin community in 2025-2026 shifted toward smaller, faster plugins that do one thing well rather than feature-bloated suites. The 12 plugins above are deliberately scoped for single-job use.

Frequently asked questions

What are the best free Figma plugins in 2026?

The most-used free Figma plugins for working designers in 2026 are Iconify (icons), Unsplash (stock photos), Icons8 Background Remover (AI background removal), Autoflow (user flow diagrams), Stark free tier (accessibility checks), and Content Reel (realistic mock data). These six plugins replace approximately $400-600/year of paid tool subscriptions for an individual designer working on product UI.

Are free Figma plugins as good as paid plugins?

For most common workflows in 2026, yes. The free plugins listed above cover 80-90% of the functionality of their paid equivalents at zero cost. The paid versions typically win on three dimensions: enterprise team features (shared libraries, organization-wide audits), advanced edge cases (complex background removal, advanced design token Git sync), and customer support. For solo designers and small teams, the free tier is sufficient. For enterprise design systems, paid tools become worth the cost.

Can I use free Figma plugins for commercial work?

Yes, with license verification per plugin. The free plugins listed above are MIT licensed, Microsoft-built (Content Reel), or have explicit commercial-use permissions in their license terms. Always verify the specific license on each plugin's Figma Community page before client work. Some asset libraries inside plugins have separate license terms — Iconify's icon sets, for example, each have their own license (most are MIT or Open Font License, but verify per-set for commercial work).

How do I install Figma plugins?

Open Figma, click the right-click menu in any file or open the main menu and navigate to Plugins → Browse plugins in Community. Search the plugin name, click "Try it out" or "Install." The plugin appears in your Figma plugins menu (right-click → Plugins) and is available across all your Figma files. No restart required. Plugins install on a per-account basis, so team members need to install their own copies.

Do Figma plugins work on the free Starter plan?

Yes. All 12 plugins listed above work on Figma's free Starter plan. The Figma Starter plan in 2026 includes unlimited plugin usage; the file limits (3 files for Starter) apply to your Figma files, not to plugin installations. Figma's AI credit limits (150/day on Starter) apply to Figma's built-in AI features, not third-party plugin AI features (Icons8 Background Remover, for example, uses its own AI without consuming Figma credits).

Which free Figma plugin replaces Streamline?

Iconify is the strongest free Streamline alternative in 2026. While Streamline ships a consistent house style of 200,000+ icons for $240/year, Iconify provides 150+ open-source icon sets (Material Icons, Heroicons, Phosphor, Lucide, Tabler, Bootstrap Icons, Carbon, Remix) totaling millions of free icons inside Figma. The trade-off is that mixing icon sets in one design can create visual inconsistency; choose one icon family (typically Lucide or Phosphor for shadcn-aligned React projects) and stick with it.

Does Figma have a free background remover?

Yes. Icons8 Background Remover is the leading free Figma plugin for AI background removal, with no signup requirement and no per-image limits. It replaces remove.bg ($9-39/month) for the standard use cases (product photos, headshots, simple subjects). For complex edge cases (fine hair, transparent objects, motion blur), Photoshop's manual selection tools or remove.bg's paid tiers still produce better results.

What is the best free Figma plugin for design tokens?

Tokens Studio (free tier) is the dominant free design token plugin in 2026 with full DTCG specification support. The free tier handles single-file token management for colors, typography, spacing, shadows, and motion. The Pro tier ($39/month) unlocks Git sync and multi-file workflows for enterprise design systems. Figma's built-in Variables system also handles basic token functionality natively in 2026 without requiring any plugin.

Where to go from here

Install three plugins from the list above today: Iconify, Unsplash, and Spelll. These three cover the highest-frequency design tasks (icon insertion, image insertion, copy review) and demonstrate the value of the plugin workflow before you commit to a larger plugin stack. After a week, add Stark (free) and Content Reel if accessibility and mock data are recurring needs.

The plugin install cost is zero. The keep-or-uninstall decision is the only real cost: plugins you do not use clutter the plugin menu and slow down Figma marginally. Uninstall plugins you haven't used in the last 30 days. Keep the working set lean.

Discovering more design tool resources on Mantlr

Mantlr curates every Figma plugin and design tool worth knowing — free vs paid, honest reviews, no filler:

$1,200/year in paid tools you don't need. Mantlr curates 500+ design resources — Figma plugins, UI kits, templates, and tools — so you know exactly what's worth paying for and what's free.

Browse the Mantlr Directory →

Sources and methodology

Research conducted May 2026. Plugin selections cross-referenced against Muzli's "Best Figma Plugins for Designers in 2026" (muz.li/blog/best-figma-plugins-for-designers-in-2026, February 2026), Magier's "30 Best Figma Plugins for Designers 2026" (magier.com, May 2026), BG Remover Pro's "Best Figma Plugins for Designers in 2026" (bgremoverpro.com, March 2026), and LinkStart AI's "10 Best Figma Plugins Designers Should Try in 2026" (linkstartai.com, February 2026). Pricing comparisons verified against official pricing pages for Streamline (streamlinehq.com), Nucleo (nucleoapp.com), Shutterstock (shutterstock.com), Adobe Stock (stock.adobe.com), remove.bg (remove.bg/pricing), Whimsical (whimsical.com/pricing), Lucidchart (lucidchart.com/pricing), Stark (getstark.co/pricing), Tokens Studio (tokens.studio/pricing), Specify (specifyapp.com), Anima (animaapp.com/pricing), and Grammarly (grammarly.com/plans), all retrieved May 2026. Figma plan pricing verified against Figma's official pricing page (figma.com/pricing) and TemperStack's "Figma Pricing April 2026" (temperstack.com/plans/figma, March 2026). Iconify icon set details verified against the Iconify Figma plugin community page and the official Iconify documentation (iconify.design). DTCG specification context from the official Design Tokens Community Group documentation.

About Mantlr

Mantlr is a hand-picked directory of design tools, UI kits, templates, and resources for working designers and developers. Every resource is reviewed before listing. We publish weekly guides on the tools designers actually use to ship.

Browse the full Mantlr directory →

#free figma plugins 2026#best figma plugins#figma plugins designers#free figma plugins replace paid#figma plugin alternatives
M
Written by
Mantlr Team
Founder at Mantlr. Curating the best free design resources for the community.