🎉 Launch offer: free until September 30, 2026
Replace Lorem Ipsum and "John Doe" with authentic, culture-accurate data across 5 languages. Real names, addresses, phones — directly in Figma.
The fake-data problem
Placeholder data creates blind spots in your mockups. A German user's name doesn't fit in an American form field. A Japanese address overflows a French layout. Lorem Ipsum isn't just ugly — it's misleading.
American-style names hide real layout issues. A Japanese person has a family name first, two-part kanji names, and a romaji romanization. Designs fail in production because "John Doe" never revealed the bug.
A German address puts the house number after the street name. A Japanese address runs prefecture → ward → block → number — the opposite of the West. Generic placeholders hide every one of these alignment issues.
A SIRET number has 14 digits. A Spanish NIF has 8 digits and a letter. A US Social Security Number is 3-2-4 digits. Generic "XXXX" placeholders will never reveal truncation, validation errors, or field-width problems.
What it generates
Each data point is drawn from real official sources — INSEE, US Census, Destatis, INE, NTT — so your mockups reflect the true diversity of your users.
French (FR), English US (EN), German (DE), Spanish (ES), Japanese (JP) — each with native names, correct address formats, local phone prefixes, and locale-specific IDs. Switch locale with one click.
🇫🇷 🇺🇸 🇩🇪 🇪🇸 🇯🇵Every text node belonging to the same "person" gets consistent data: the same first name, email derived from that name, matching locale address. No more "Maria Müller" with a Tokyo phone number.
ProSelect 50 list items and fill them all in under 3 seconds. Each entry gets unique, varied data — no repetition. Ideal for contact lists, product tables, dashboards, and data-dense interfaces.
Pro (>10 nodes)Generate realistic-format identifiers: SIRET and IBAN FR, SSN-format (US), NIF/NIE (ES), Steuernummer (DE). All fictional, with a clear disclaimer — but correct format, length, and Luhn checksum where applicable.
ProSet a seed value and regenerate the exact same dataset across all locales. Test the same fictional user in five languages. Share a seed with your team so everyone uses identical mockup data during reviews.
FreeNames from INSEE (FR), US Census Bureau (EN), Destatis (DE), INE (ES), and curated Japanese name datasets. Addresses from BAN (FR) and algorithmically generated correct-format addresses per locale.
Open dataBefore / After
See the difference between generic placeholders and authentic locale-specific data across four languages — same interface, completely different reality.
Pricing
FAQ
Yes. Names come from official statistical sources: INSEE (France), US Census Bureau (United States), Destatis (Germany), INE (Spain). Addresses follow the exact postal format of each country — house number after street name in Germany, reverse order (prefecture → district → block) in Japan. Phone numbers use real valid prefixes for each region.
No — they are entirely fictional but structurally valid. A generated SIRET follows the Luhn checksum algorithm and has the correct 14-digit format. A US SSN follows the 3-2-4 pattern. They will never correspond to a real person or company. Each identifier type comes with a visible disclaimer inside the plugin.
No. All data generation happens entirely inside the Figma plugin — it is 100% local, with zero network calls for data generation. The only request that reaches a server is license key validation for Pro users, which contains no design data whatsoever.
When you select a group of nodes that belong to a single "person" (e.g., a contact card), the plugin assigns a consistent fictional identity: the email is derived from the generated name, the phone prefix matches the address region, and the locale stays consistent. You can also lock a person across an entire frame or page.
Yes. Japanese names are generated in both formats: kanji (e.g., 田中 美咲) and romaji (Tanaka Misaki). Addresses are generated in Japanese postal format (〒160-0022 東京都新宿区…) and in romaji (Shinjuku 3-14-1, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo). You can choose which format to insert, or insert both.