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WebAR vs App-Based AR for Furniture Brands: Which One Converts Better? | TouchTry

WebAR vs App-Based AR for Furniture Brands: Which One Converts Better?

Furniture brands considering AR usually face an early technical decision: Should AR run inside a browser (WebAR) or inside a mobile app?
The short answer:

WebAR converts more traffic because shoppers can launch AR instantly from a product page.

App-based AR can deliver higher visual fidelity, but requires customers to install an app first.

For most ecommerce brands — especially Shopify / WooCommerce stores — WebAR typically drives higher usage and more measurable conversion impact because it removes the biggest barrier: app installation friction.

AR adoption is less about graphics perfection and more about how easily customers can try the product in their room.

  • What This Guide Covers This article explains:
  • What WebAR and app-based AR actually mean
  • Why installation friction affects AR usage
  • Which approach converts better in furniture ecommerce
  • Where apps still outperform browsers
  • Cost and implementation differences
  • A simple decision framework for furniture brands
  • Real examples from major ecommerce companies

Quick Answer: Which Converts Better?

In most ecommerce scenarios, WebAR converts better because it removes the need to download an app.

Conversion comparison:

Factor                             WebAR                      App-Based AR

Launch friction              Very low                   High (install required)

PDP integration               Direct                       Usually external

Usage rate                        Higher                      Lower

Visual fidelity                    Medium–High         High

Ideal for                              Ecommerce PDPs   Brand ecosystems

The biggest difference is accessibility.

A shopper browsing your website is far more likely to try AR if the experience launches instantly.

What Is WebAR?

Definition: WebAR is augmented reality that runs directly in a mobile browser without requiring an app installation.

The typical flow:

  • Shopper opens a furniture product page
  • Clicks “View in your room”
  • Phone camera launches
  • Product appears at real scale in the room
  • The entire experience happens inside the browser.
  • This approach works especially well with:
  • Shopify stores
  • WooCommerce stores
  • Direct-to-consumer furniture brands
  • Marketplace product pages

What Is App-Based AR?

Definition: App-based AR requires the shopper to install and open a mobile app before launching AR.

Typical flow:

  • Shopper downloads brand app
  • Opens the product inside the app
  • Launches AR mode
  • Places product in the room

This model became popular when AR technology first emerged, because early browsers lacked the capabilities required for AR rendering.

Today, modern smartphone browsers support AR natively through technologies like AR Quick Look and WebXR.

Why Installation Friction Matters for Conversion

The biggest challenge with app-based AR is customer drop-off during installation.

Typical friction chain:

Product page → install app → open app → find product → launch AR

Many users abandon the process before reaching the AR step.

WebAR removes these steps:

Product page → launch AR

For ecommerce conversion, fewer steps usually means higher engagement.

AR Usage Rate: The Hidden Conversion Driver

AR only affects conversion if shoppers actually use it.

Usage comparison:

Stage                               WebAR                                   App AR

Visitors reaching PDP       High                                   Medium

Visitors launching AR       Higher                                   Lower

AR engagement time       Moderate                                   High

Conversion influence Strong Depends on install rate

Because WebAR launches instantly, more shoppers actually reach the AR experience.

Why Furniture Brands Prefer WebAR

Furniture is a context-dependent product.

Buyers need to answer questions like:

Will this sofa fit?

Does this table block walking space?

Does this match my room style?

Those decisions happen during the product page visit, not inside a separate mobile app.

WebAR works well because it keeps the decision process inside the PDP funnel.

When App-Based AR Still Makes Sense

Despite the advantages of WebAR, apps still offer some benefits.

App-based AR can be stronger when:

  • The brand already has millions of app users
  • AR requires very complex 3D interactions
  • The brand offers advanced design tools
  • The experience is part of a larger ecosystem

For example:

  • Interior design apps
  • Room planner apps
  • Gaming-style furniture configurators

These use cases rely on deeper interaction than simple product placement.

WebAR vs App AR: Technical Differences

Feature                               WebAR                  App AR

Launch location                 Browser               Mobile app

Installation required          No                         Yes

Development cost             Moderate             Higher

Updates                               Instant                   App update required

Distribution                        Website traffic       App users

Conversion focus            PDP experience      App engagement

For ecommerce brands focused on sales conversion, WebAR typically integrates more naturally.

Real-World Examples

Several large companies demonstrate both approaches.

Browser-based AR

Furniture brands using “View in Room” directly on PDPs

Ecommerce stores integrating AR with Shopify product pages

Marketplaces offering browser AR previews

App-based AR

Dedicated interior design apps

Early AR shopping experiments

Apps designed around immersive experiences

Over time, many brands have moved toward browser-based AR because it reaches more shoppers.

Implementation Effort: WebAR vs App AR

Approach                                  Effort                            Timeline

WebAR pilot                             Moderate                     30–60 days

WebAR catalog rollout          Medium                        2–4 months

App AR development            High                                4–12 months

For many ecommerce teams, the pilot approach is the most practical starting point.

Simple Decision Framework

If your goal is ecommerce conversion, ask these questions:

  1. Do customers discover products on your website?

→ WebAR usually fits best.

  1. Do most customers already use your mobile app?

→ App-based AR could make sense.

  1. Is AR meant to assist product decisions?

→ WebAR works well.

  1. Is AR part of a broader interactive platform?

→ App AR may be stronger.

In practice, many brands eventually support both, but start with WebAR.

Where WebAR Still Has Limitations

WebAR is powerful but not perfect.

Common limitations include:

  • Device compatibility differences
  • Lower rendering fidelity than native apps
  • Browser performance constraints
  • Dependence on model optimization

However, modern devices have significantly reduced these gaps.

Why WebAR Is Growing in Ecommerce

The ecommerce industry is moving toward browser-first experiences.

Reasons include:

  • Faster deployment
  • Lower development cost
  • Better discoverability
  • Easier integration with product pages

Because the purchase decision occurs on the product detail page, technologies that improve the PDP experience often have the most impact.

Want to test WebAR on your best-selling furniture products?

You can deploy Try in Room on 10–30 SKUs, measure engagement and add-to-cart lift, and scale only if the numbers justify it.

If helpful, we can help map a simple pilot plan for your catalog.

FAQ of WebAR vs App-Based AR for Furniture Brands

1 Is WebAR better than app AR for furniture ecommerce?

For most ecommerce brands, yes. WebAR typically reaches more shoppers because it launches instantly from the product page.

2 Does WebAR support real-scale furniture placement?

Yes. Modern WebAR systems allow products to be placed at true scale inside a room using a smartphone camera.

3 Do customers actually use AR on product pages?

Usage varies, but when the feature is clearly visible and loads quickly, a meaningful share of visitors interact with AR during the purchase decision.

4 Should furniture brands build their own AR app?

Only if the brand already has a large active mobile app user base. Otherwise, browser-based AR usually delivers faster adoption.