SketchUp 2026: What’s New (and What It Means for Designers Like Us)
SketchUp 2026 is now officially released (ahead of its usual March/April schedule), and for those of us using SketchUp day in and day out in design work, the update feels like a careful polishing rather than a reinvention. As someone whose primary workflow revolves around modeling, rendering with V-Ray, documentation, and teaching, I’m pleased overall—but I also recognize that many of the changes won’t shift the needle too much in my particular world. Read the full SketchUp 2026 Release Notes here.
That said, there are quality-of-life wins, especially in performance, tool responsiveness, and LayOut improvements. Below is what stood out to me (good and less-good), how I see it applying to interior, kitchen, and landscape design, and what I’d still like to see.
Key Takeaways:
- Performance refinements take center stage — navigating heavier models feels smoother.
- Tool updates (Scale, Rotate, Scene undo) make everyday modeling more forgiving.
- LayOut enhancements improve consistency and add useful drafting features.
- Major new features (collaboration, Live Components evolution) feel more targeted at large teams than solo/small-shop workflows.
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Table of Contents
What’s New, Organized: SketchUp + LayOut Features in 2026
Below is a consolidated list of notable updates I’ve identified in this release (some from official release notes, some from my own testing), along with commentary on how each might (or might not) affect your design workflow.
SketchUp Desktop & Modeling Features in 2026
| Feature / Area | What’s New or Improved | My Take | ||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Performance / Responsiveness | Faster orbiting, improved handling of large models, smoother navigation | This is the headline win for me. When a model gets heavy with furniture, site context, terrain, or landscape detail, I can feel lag. The improved performance is immediately perceptible. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Scale tool enhancements | More intuitive behavior and grip feedback | Since I use scaling all the time (resizing millwork, cabinetry, site objects), it feels snappier. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Rotate tool updates | More responsive grips, less “fiddly” rotations | Rotating furniture, planters, lighting fixtures, etc., now feels more predictable. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Scene “Undo” | When you accidentally overwrite a scene, you can undo the change | I rarely overwrite scenes by mistake, but it’s nice to have that safety net. I still would have preferred scene folders or grouping to manage a long list of scenes more cleanly. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Ambient Occlusion (AO) | Improved AO toggles and behavior in SketchUp styles | AO can enrich quick conceptual visualizations inside SketchUp. However, as my deliverables are photorealistic renders via V-Ray, I don’t use AO much in my final presentations. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Collaboration (in-model) | New built-in collaborative editing and shared access (inside SketchUp) | This is likely the biggest “headline” feature in 2026. But for a small operation like mine, collaboration usually happens via renders or shared output rather than live editing in SketchUp. So I don’t expect this to meaningfully affect my workflow. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Live Components / Parametric Objects | Continued refinements, better integration in content library | I still don’t lean on Live Components heavily—they often lack the level of detail I need and run into issues with materials when exported or rendered in V-Ray. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Other minor adjustments / fixes | Usability tweaks, internal optimizations, bug fixes | Some of the smaller fixes help maintain stability but don’t radically change modeling behavior. |
| Feature / Area | What’s New or Improved | My Take |
|---|---|---|
| More consistent UI / tool behavior | LayOut tools act more similarly to SketchUp (better alignment in behavior) | This consistency helps reduce friction when switching between modeling and documentation. |
| New drafting tools | Four additional drafting tools (e.g. linework utilities) | These give more flexibility for custom annotation without switching back to SketchUp. |
| Scrapbook / Library upgrades | Built-in libraries for windows, doors, furniture, kitchen, bath | I like this a lot—faster documentation using preloaded elements (especially in interiors or kitchens) helps me avoid recreating generic objects inside LayOut. |
| Viewport improvements | Viewports in LayOut now better respect SketchUp visual settings, including environments and AO (depending on model) | This helps the visual consistency between model and documentation, though I still lean heavily on external render output for my presentations. |
| Page Export flexibility | More control when exporting pages or page ranges from LayOut | Useful when generating subsets of documentation for clients or consultants. |
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