Frames vs Groups: What’s the Difference?

Introduction

In Figma, both Frames and Groups help organize elements — but they’re not the same thing. While it’s easy to use them interchangeably as a beginner, understanding the differences between the two will improve your design structure, layout control, and responsiveness. Let’s break it down clearly.


1. What Are Groups in Figma?

Image Placeholder: A simple group of shapes with bounding box shown

A Group (Cmd/Ctrl + G) is a basic container that bundles multiple elements together. It’s useful for quick organization — for example, when you want to move several items as a unit or apply a shared transform (like rotation or scaling).

However, Groups do not support layout properties, auto layout, clipping, or constraints. They are visual wrappers with no layout intelligence.

Use Groups when:


2. What Are Frames in Figma?

Image Placeholder: Frame properties panel showing layout and constraints

A Frame (F) is a more powerful container. Technically, every artboard in Figma is a frame — but you can also nest frames inside each other for precise control.

Frames:

Use Frames when:


3. Layout, Responsiveness & Clipping: Why Frames Matter

Image Placeholder: Frame with layout grid and Clip Content enabled

Auto Layout + Frames = Powerful combo. You can define vertical or horizontal flows, padding, spacing, and alignment. This makes Frames ideal for:

Clipping within Frames allows you to hide overflow content. This is great for:

Constraints in Frames ensure elements resize or stay pinned correctly when the frame itself is resized — crucial for designing responsive UIs.


4. Key Differences Recap

FeatureGroupFrame
Layout Properties
Auto Layout Support
Constraints
Clipping Content
Export as Image
Use in Components✅ (limited)✅ (preferred)

Conclusion

If you’re serious about design in Figma, Frames should be your go-to container. Groups have their place for quick organization, but Frames offer flexibility, precision, and power — especially when building responsive, scalable UIs. Learn to spot when a group is limiting your design, and switch to Frames to unlock Figma’s full layout potential.

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