AI Auction Descriptions, Written From Your Photos
The slowest part of every auction is typing descriptions. Lot Lingo does that part for you — you photograph, review, and publish.
A 300-lot catalog means 300 titles and 300 descriptions. At a few minutes each, that's days of typing — and by lot 250, quality slips. Lot Lingo's AI reads your photos and drafts a keyword-rich title and a structured description for every lot: what it is, the brand and model, key specs, and condition cues. Your job changes from writing to reviewing.
What the AI Handles
- Titles and descriptions drafted from your lot photos
- Brand, model, size, and material details pulled from the images
- Searchable, keyword-rich titles bidders actually find
- Your voice and templates — consistent across the whole catalog
- Full review and editing before anything publishes
- Works with K-BID, HiBid, and Auction Flex export
You Stay the Editor
AI drafts; you decide. Every title and description is fully editable before export — add serial numbers, engine hours, provenance, or condition notes where they matter. Nothing publishes without your eyes on it. The result follows the same rules that make hand-written descriptions sell (see our guide on writing lot descriptions): search terms in the title, structured details, honest condition.
From Draft to Live Listing
When the catalog is reviewed, one click exports it — formatted for K-BID or HiBid, or as CSV and photos for Auction Flex. It's the same workflow whether you run estate sales, consignment auctions, or business liquidations.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How does the AI write descriptions from photos?
- Lot Lingo analyzes your lot photos — reading labels, model plates, and visual details — and drafts a professional title and structured description. You review and edit every word before it goes anywhere.
- Will every lot description sound the same?
- No. Descriptions follow your templates and voice settings, and they vary naturally with the item. The consistency you do get is in quality — lot 300 reads as well as lot 1.
- What if the AI gets something wrong?
- You have full editorial control. Every draft is editable before export, and corrections take seconds compared to writing from scratch. Serial numbers, hours, and condition notes are easy to add during review.
- How much time does it actually save?
- Writing descriptions by hand averages 2–4 minutes per lot. Reviewing an AI draft takes seconds. Across a 300-lot auction, that is the difference between days of typing and an afternoon of review.
- Can I try it before subscribing?
- Yes. Start a free trial and generate descriptions for your first auction before choosing a plan.
Stop Typing. Start Reviewing.
Generate descriptions for your first auction on a free trial.