While Canva is great overall, there are a few areas where it could improve. Some of the best templates and elements are locked behind the premium plan, which can be a bit limiting if you’re using the free version.
Also, when working on heavy or complex designs, it sometimes feels a bit slow. More advanced customization options would be helpful too, especially for users who want more control over design details.
That said, these are minor issues compared to how useful and easy the platform is.
Flowtica Scribe
Hi everyone!
Canva AI 2.0 is a much bigger move than “more AI features.”
What Canva is really doing here is turning itself into an agentic creative workspace: conversational design, layered editable outputs, memory, connectors, scheduling, web research, brand intelligence, Sheets AI, and Canva Code 2.0 all tied into one system.
Rather than stopping at one-shot generation, Canva is trying to stay present through the whole creative process. You start with an idea, refine it through conversation, pull in context from the tools you already use, and still keep everything fully editable and on brand.
They are going after something more valuable: being the place where teams still do the last mile of editing, collaboration, and publishing.
Has it been tested and confirmed that Canva AI is reliable? I use Canva everyday and I end up doing all the manual work since the AI gives a completely different response to what we request.
Can it also be used on projects one has already began working on? For example in mind maps displaying 7 examples. Is it reliable enough to refine the options to nine and still leave it as an editable template?
as others pointed out, v1 outputs were hard to use without redoing most of the work manually. is 2.0 a new underlying design model, or the same one with better orchestration and memory on top? the answer changes how much to expect from it tbh
do people with premium get it or everyone