Back to blog

Figma plugin for Storybook

Integrate design and code, side by side

loading
Dominic Nguyen
@domyen
Last updated:

One of the biggest challenges in frontend dev is keeping designers in sync with what’s in production. UI design and implementation live in separate places (design tools and code), which naturally diverge over time. This can lead to confusion around the source of truth for what UI should look like.

To address that challenge, today I’m stoked to launch Storybook Connect for Figma, a plugin that lets you link Storybook stories to Figma designs. This connectivity helps you compare implementation vs design specs to speed up handoff and UI review.

🔗 Link stories to component variants
🕹 Play with live implementation in Figma
📌 Highlight components to reuse
📐 Compare story to spec
🔐 Set up private projects with access control

Integrate Storybook & Figma

Why we’re partnering with Figma

We believe integrations help teams ship UIs with less work. Storybook is an industry standard because it's built to be interoperable.

In the past, we've focused heavily on technical integrations like Testing Library, TypeScript, Webpack, and Vite. Earlier this year, we began researching design integrations. Components are core to both Storybook and many design tools, and our goal was to bring designers closer to the development workflow to improve communication between the two worlds.

Meanwhile, Figma was exploring how to bridge that same gap from a design point of view. So who better to partner with? We worked with Figma to map out the plugin functionality and build the initial proof of concept.

Visual testing in Storybook: Storybook 8 (2024) gives developers more power than ever to catch unexpected changes in UI implementation through the Visual Tests addon, which lets you automatically perform tests on your stories to catch unexpected rendering bugs or changes. Learn more about visual testing in Storybook.

Connect Storybook and Figma

Storybook Connect for Figma links stories to their corresponding variants. This helps teams resolve inconsistencies earlier in the design process and identify reusable components.

Brex, Microsoft, Rabobank, The Washington Post

Link assets once and they’ll automatically stay up to date with the latest versions of the design or implementation. What’s more, that extends to all component instances and across your team, so folks don’t have to link components over and over again.

Click on the component in Figma then paste the story URL that matches the design.

Link to a story

Open the plugin to reference the live story. Designers can check how a component works before using it in their designs.

Interact with live implementation

Hand off designs to developers

Design handoff is the process of passing specs to developers for implementation. Unfortunately, this can be a lossy process, and design details regularly get lost in translation, especially when there’s a tight deadline (and there is so often a tight deadline).

Storybook's Figma plugin streamlines handoff by calling out which design components have already been implemented in the Figma sidebar.

Links to View Story in Figma sidebar
Components with links to stories are called out in the Figma sidebar.

During handoff, click “Open story in browser” to jump into the complete Storybook environment with addons, tests, and API docs.

Open Storybook in new browser

Review UI implementation with designers

UI review is a process of gathering feedback on UI implementation from designers. It’s used to flush out non-obvious design details and technical hurdles and confirm that the implementation meets the design spec.

Storybook's Figma plugin helps designers check that the rendered UI matches the design via Storybook addons. Use the Measure addon to compare dimensions and spacing of DOM elements vs design specs.

Measure addon for Storybook

Alternatively, use Storybook's Outline addon to visualize the boundaries of each DOM element for debugging CSS alignment.

Outline addon for Storybook

You can also verify whether a component’s color palette is accessible by toggling the visual filters within Storybook's Accessibility addon to simulate different forms of colorblindness.

Accessibility addon for Storybook

Try the plugin now

Storybook Connect for Figma is powered by Storybook embeds and Chromatic, a visual testing and publishing tool created by the core Storybook team. Follow the instructions below to get started!

Prerequisites

  1. Install the Storybook Connect plugin from the Figma community
  2. Open the plugin. Use the command palette in Figma CMD + / then type Storybook Connect.
Open Storybook Connect plugin using Figma command palette

3. Select a Figma component to link. The plugin supports linking stories to Figma components, variants, and instances. The addon does not support linking stories to layers.

Select component in Figma

4. Paste the URL to the story into the plugin’s form field to link the story to your Figma component, variant, or instance.

Link to a story window

5. Once linked, the component and its instances will all have links in the sidebar to view the corresponding story.

Links to View Story in Figma sidebar

Open a story in Figma

  1. Select the component that you’ve previously linked in Figma.
  2. Then navigate to Figma’s Design sidebar tab and click the “View story” action. Alternatively, open the plugin by using the command palette command + / then type the name Storybook Connect.
Open story in Figma

Learn more


🙏 Shoutouts: The plugin was developed by Jono Kolnik, Michael Arestad, Gert Hengeveld, Zoltan Olah, and Dominic Nguyen (me!). Much appreciation to early access users kaelig, yngvenilson, michalzadkowski, oogo, pilotconway, rikot, w-a-t-s-o-n, reony, webhode, and hundreds more. Special thanks to Figma’s Emil Sjölander and Emily Brody for supporting our open source community.

Join the Storybook mailing list

Get the latest news, updates and releases

6,613 developers and counting

We’re hiring!

Join the team behind Storybook and Chromatic. Build tools that are used in production by 100s of thousands of developers. Remote-first.

View jobs

Popular posts

Storybook Performance: Vite vs Webpack

We benchmarked both builders to see which is faster.
loading
Ian VanSchooten

Automate accessibility tests with Storybook

Use Accessibility addon to run checks during development and the test runner to catch regressions
loading
Varun Vachhar

Storybook Lazy Compilation for Webpack

Lightning fast local development experience for large Storybooks
loading
Tom Coleman
Join the community
6,613 developers and counting
WhyWhy StorybookComponent-driven UI
DocsGuidesTutorialsChangelogTelemetry
CommunityAddonsGet involvedBlog
ShowcaseExploreProjectsComponent glossary
Open source software
Storybook

Maintained by
Chromatic
Special thanks to Netlify and CircleCI