You opened AutoCAD, looked at the interface, and closed it again. Or maybe you watched a few YouTube tutorials, followed along okay, and then sat in front of a blank file with no idea what to do next.
Either way, you walked away with the same thought: AutoCAD is not for me.
I want to push back on that. Not with empty reassurance, but with a real explanation. Because in my experience, the problem is almost never the person. It’s the order in which they tried to learn.
Most people learn AutoCAD backwards
Here’s what usually happens. Someone searches “AutoCAD tutorial for beginners” and lands on a video made for architects or engineers. The instructor explains every tool in the interface, one by one, before a single drawing gets made. By minute twenty, you’ve forgotten what minute two covered. Nothing connects to anything else yet.
Or the opposite happens. You find a workflow video, something like “how to draw a floor plan in AutoCAD.” You follow along step by step. It works, right up until the moment you try to do it yourself on your own project. Then it falls apart, because you were copying steps without understanding what each one actually does.
Both of those experiences feel like failure. They’re not. They’re just the wrong starting point.
The three stages of actually learning AutoCAD
Whether you’re learning with me, on your own, or with another instructor, the process needs to follow a specific order. Skip a stage and the next one won’t make sense. This isn’t a theory. It’s just how building any skill works.
Stage 1: Learn the foundation
This means learning the commands that matter for interior design work. Not every tool AutoCAD has. Not the full ribbon. Just the core set of drawing and other commands and settings that you will actually use on real projects.
Line, polyline, offset, trim, copy, mirror, move. Layers. How to set up a file properly. How to get from model space to a printed PDF. That’s the foundation.
Without this stage, everything else is confusing. You can’t follow a workflow if you don’t know what the individual commands do. You can’t troubleshoot when something goes wrong.
Stage 2: Apply it to real interior design work
Once the commands make sense on their own, you apply them to actual drawing types: floor plans, sections and elevations, construction details, project drawing sets. This is where the foundation stops being abstract and starts meaning something.
This stage is where most people start, which is why most people get stuck. The commands only click when you’ve already spent time with them in isolation first.
Stage 3: Optimize your workflow
Now that you can produce drawings, you make the process faster and more consistent. Templates so you’re not setting up layers and plot styles from scratch every time. Block libraries so your furniture and fixtures are ready to drop in. Best practices for file management and project organization.
These tools are powerful. But they only make sense once you understand what they’re optimizing. A template for a process you don’t fully understand yet is just a file full of mystery settings.
Why the order matters so much
Each stage only works because the one before it did its job.
Think about it like learning to drive. You don’t start by merging onto a highway. You learn the controls first, then quiet streets, then busier roads. Not because the highway is impossible, but because you need each layer of experience before the next one makes sense.
AutoCAD works the same way. The foundation gives you the vocabulary. The application gives you the context. The optimization gives you the speed. You need all three, and you need them in that order.
If you need another metaphor, you have to learn to walk before you can run.
Where other approaches fall short
It’s worth being honest about why a lot of AutoCAD learning doesn’t work, so you can spot the gap if you’re evaluating your options.
Basics only, no application. You learn what the commands do, but you never see how they come together on a real interior design drawing. You finish the course and still don’t know what to do with a blank file and a client brief.
Workflow only, no foundation. You can copy one type of drawing by following steps, but the moment the project changes, you’re lost. You don’t have enough understanding to adapt.
Too much, too fast. A lot of AutoCAD training is built for engineers or people wanting to be CAD techs. It covers tools and workflows that interior designers will never need. You spend time learning things that don’t apply to your work, which makes the things that do apply harder to find and remember.
In-person training. A live class has real value, but it doesn’t let you pause, rewind, or come back to something a week later when it finally makes sense. You get one pass through the material, at the pace the group sets.
None of these are unsolvable. But if you’ve tried any of them and felt like AutoCAD wasn’t clicking, one of these is probably why.
How this plays out in my AutoCAD for Interior Designers course
The course is built around these three stages. I call them Basics, Build, and Boost.
Basics covers the foundation: the interface, drawing and modifying commands, layers and blocks, and layouts and plotting. This is where you learn the vocabulary. By the end of this section, you know what the commands do and how a drawing file is structured. (In the older version of the course, these were the core modules.)
Build is where you apply everything. You draw floor plans, sections and elevations, and construction details. You work through full project drawing sets covering existing conditions, demolition, design, and finalized drawings. You learn how to style drawings for both technical and presentation purposes, including workflows that bring AutoCAD into Photoshop or use AI for presentation output. By the end of this section, you can take a real project from a blank file to a complete drawing set. (In the older version of the course, these were the worfklow modules.)
Boost is about optimization. You build a custom template from scratch, covering layers, plot styles, text and dimension styles, and title block layouts. You set up a block library with the furniture, fixtures, symbols, and architecture pieces you actually use. And you work through best practices for file management, studio standards, and working efficiently over time. By the end, what used to take you an hour takes twenty minutes. (In the older version of the course, this was the template modules.)
A note if you’ve tried before and it didn’t stick
If you’ve attempted to learn AutoCAD before and walked away feeling like it wasn’t for you, I’d ask you to consider which stage you actually got to.
Most people who “failed” at AutoCAD never really failed at AutoCAD. They failed at a tutorial that skipped the foundation, or a workflow video that assumed too much, or a course that taught them AutoCAD for the wrong profession.
The skill is learnable. I’ve seen hundreds of interior designers pick it up, including people who were completely convinced they were too old, too non-technical, or too far behind to do it. The ones who got there followed a process that made sense. That’s all it takes.
If you want to see what that looks like in practice, the AutoCAD for Interior Designers course is open now, with the newest version, with an expanded section on boosting your skills as well as a Mac and PC version, launches June 2026.
You’ve got this.

