Seedance 2.0 Real Estate Prompts: Walk Throughs Without a Camera
Seedance 2.0 real estate prompts for listing walk throughs, exterior reveals, and lifestyle shots. Five templates agents can ship today.

Seedance 2.0 real estate prompts that ship in minutes
Seedance 2.0 real estate prompts are how an agent ships listing video without booking a drone operator. Real estate marketing has always lived or died on listing video. The agents who consistently produce beautiful walk through clips win the listing race. The problem is cost: drone operators, interior videographers, color graders, and editors run thousands per listing. For a starter home with thin margins, the math does not work.
Seedance 2.0 changes the math completely. With the right prompt, you can generate a believable interior reveal, an exterior approach, or a lifestyle shot in under a minute. This guide covers the five real estate prompt formats I have shipped most often, with copyable templates and notes on how to remix them per listing.
If you are an agent, a real estate marketer, or a property manager, this is the playbook for spinning up listing content without a camera or a crew.
Why real estate needs Seedance 2.0
Seedance 2.0 real estate prompts work best with a slow camera move (slow dolly in or slow tracking pan), deep depth of field for full room visibility, soft window light for interiors, golden hour for exteriors, and a 4 to 5 anchor warm neutral palette. Always name "no shake" or "on a gimbal" so the model commits to smooth motion instead of handheld energy.
Three problems plague real estate video production. First, scheduling (you need the property empty, the lighting right, the staging perfect). Second, cost (a single listing video typically runs hundreds to thousands of dollars depending on the market). Third, turnaround (the listing goes live, the photos are ready, the video is still in editing).
Seedance 2.0 solves all three. Scheduling becomes irrelevant because there is no shoot. Cost drops to a fraction of a real shoot. Turnaround drops from days to minutes. The only thing you give up is hyper accurate property representation, which is why image to video and reference photos matter for listings where exact accuracy is required.
The five formats below cover the bulk of real estate video needs. Use them as starting points and remix per property.
Format 1: Interior room reveal
Wide shot, eye level, deep depth of field, slow dolly in. A spacious modern living room with large floor to ceiling windows looking out onto a leafy neighborhood. A cream linen sectional sofa faces a stone fireplace, a low walnut coffee table sits in the middle, a textured rug grounds the space. Soft natural window light from camera right floods the room, gentle shadows on the left, palette of cream, warm walnut, sage green plants, soft white walls. Filmed with iPhone on a gimbal, slow steady push in over five seconds, no shake. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: the framing is named explicitly: wide shot, eye level, deep depth of field, slow dolly in. Real estate needs deep focus so the entire room is in frame. The slow dolly in is the universal real estate move. The "no shake" cue is critical because real estate viewers expect smooth professional motion, not handheld energy.
The room is described with specific furniture and materials (cream linen sectional, walnut coffee table, textured rug, stone fireplace). These details give the model enough to render a realistic interior. The palette anchors (cream, warm walnut, sage green, soft white) lock the warm neutral aesthetic that sells most listings.
For any interior reveal, this prompt structure works. Swap the room (kitchen, bedroom, bathroom), the materials, and the palette.
Format 2: Exterior approach
Wide shot, low angle, deep depth of field, slow dolly forward. A two story modern farmhouse with white board and batten siding, black framed windows, a covered front porch with two rocking chairs, and a wooden front door painted deep navy. The driveway is paved with light gray gravel, leading to the porch steps. Lush green lawn on either side, mature oak trees in the background. Warm golden hour sunlight from camera left, long shadows reaching toward the house, palette of warm cream, navy, deep green, gold. Filmed with iPhone on a gimbal, slow steady push toward the front door over six seconds, no shake. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: the exterior approach is the second most important real estate format. The slow forward dolly is the universal hero shot for a listing. The low angle makes the house look grander. Naming the front door color is a small touch that gives the model a focal point to track during the dolly in.
The golden hour lighting and the long shadows are what sell the shot. Real estate listings always look better at golden hour than at noon, and Seedance 2.0 reads the cue cleanly. Paste this into VIDEO AI ME with your own listing's architectural style swapped in.
Format 3: Kitchen showcase
Medium wide shot, eye level, deep depth of field, slow tracking pan from left to right. A modern kitchen with a large white marble waterfall island in the center, brushed brass pendant lights above, white shaker cabinets on the perimeter, black hardware, a deep farmhouse sink, and a six burner gas range with a copper pot already on the back burner. Two stools tucked under the island. Soft natural window light from camera right, palette of marble white, brass gold, soft cream, walnut accents. Filmed with iPhone on a gimbal, slow tracking move over five seconds, no shake. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: kitchens sell houses. The slow tracking pan from left to right reveals the entire kitchen in one continuous move, which is more efficient than multiple cuts.
The specific kitchen details (marble waterfall island, brass pendants, shaker cabinets, farmhouse sink, gas range, copper pot) give the model a concrete kitchen to render. The copper pot on the back burner is a small lifestyle touch that makes the kitchen feel used, not staged.
For any kitchen reveal, swap the materials and finishes to match the listing. Keep the slow tracking pan and the soft window light.
Format 4: Lifestyle moment
Medium shot, eye level, shallow depth of field, locked tripod. A man in his thirties sits on a cream linen sofa in a sunlit modern living room, holding a steaming mug of coffee in both hands, looking out a large window toward a leafy backyard. Soft natural window light from camera left wraps around him, dust particles floating in the sunbeam. The room around him is calm, a small fiddle leaf fig in the corner, a stack of books on the coffee table, a folded throw blanket on the arm of the sofa. Palette of cream, soft white, sage green, warm walnut. Filmed with iPhone on a tripod, perfectly still, slow real time moment over six seconds. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: lifestyle moments are the format that converts buyers emotionally. The shot is not about the property itself, it is about what life feels like in the property. A man with coffee, a sunbeam, a fiddle leaf fig, a folded blanket. The viewer projects themselves into the scene.
The locked tripod and the perfectly still cue tell Seedance 2.0 to commit to a contemplative pace. No motion, no dialogue, just atmosphere.
For any property type, this prompt structure works. Swap the character (couple on a balcony, family in a kitchen, woman reading by a window) and the location detail.
Format 5: Empty staged room (image to video)
Medium wide shot, eye level, deep depth of field, slow dolly in. The reference image shows an empty bedroom with cream walls, hardwood floors, and a single window. Animate the camera slowly pushing into the room. As the camera moves, the room appears virtually staged with a king bed dressed in soft white linens, two natural wood nightstands with brass lamps, a textured area rug, and a small upholstered bench at the foot of the bed. Soft natural window light from camera right floods the room, palette of cream, soft white, warm walnut, sage green. Filmed with iPhone on a gimbal, slow steady push in over six seconds, no shake. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: this is an image to video prompt that uses a real empty room photo as the reference and prompts virtual staging. The model takes the empty room as the first frame and renders the staged furniture as the camera moves in. The result is a clip that shows agents and buyers what the room could look like staged without paying a stager.
The slow dolly in gives the model time to commit to the furniture placement. The specific furniture details (king bed, two nightstands, area rug, bench) give the model a clear inventory to render.
For any empty listing, this is the prompt format to use. Open VIDEO AI ME and run the prompt with a real empty room photo from your next listing.
Common real estate prompt mistakes
- Vague room descriptions. A nice living room is not enough. A spacious modern living room with large windows and a stone fireplace gives the model a concrete starting point.
- Forgetting the camera move. Real estate is built on slow camera moves. Always name the move (slow dolly in, slow tracking pan, locked tripod).
- Handheld energy. Real estate viewers expect smooth professional motion. Always include "no shake" or "on a gimbal" to lock the motion.
- Harsh midday lighting. Real estate looks best at golden hour for exteriors and soft window light for interiors. Avoid noon sun.
- Missing the palette anchors. Without 3 to 5 named colors, the model picks generic tones. Always anchor.
- Skipping the negative cue. Real estate prompts often get stock piano music layered on by default. Always include the no music line.
- Forgetting the drone overhead format. For lot reveals or backyard shots, name "drone overhead" as the camera identity and the model will commit to a true aerial angle.
How to remix this on VIDEO AI ME
Inside VIDEO AI ME, you can save any of these real estate templates and fork them per listing. For accurate exterior or interior representation, pin a real photo of the property as a reference image and let Seedance 2.0 animate from there. For agents who run multiple listings per week, the time savings stack up fast: a single afternoon of prompt iteration can produce a month of listing content. VIDEO AI ME pricing shows what each plan includes.
Wrap up
Real estate marketing no longer requires a camera, a crew, or a shoot day for every listing. With Seedance 2.0, the slow dolly in, the golden hour exterior, the staged room reveal, and the lifestyle moment are all a paragraph away. Steal the templates, swap the property, ship the listing video. Try Seedance 2.0 free on VIDEO AI ME and produce your next listing video before the open house starts.
More Seedance 2.0 prompts to study
The four reference videos used throughout this guide (a multi shot street interview, a skatepark product UGC, an unboxing narrative with a timelapse, and a high energy gamer reaction) live as a full copyable library on Seedance 2.0 Prompt Templates: Copy Paste and Ship. Bookmark it and remix any of the four when you need a starting point.
Related Seedance 2.0 guides on VIDEO AI ME
If you want to go deeper, these guides pair well with this one:
- Make Explainer Videos With Seedance 2.0 in Under 10 Minutes
- The Seedance 2.0 Prompt Guide: 10 Rules That Always Work
- Seedance 2.0 UGC Prompts: 7 Templates You Can Steal
- Seedance 2.0 Explainer Video Prompts That Convert
You can also browse the full VIDEO AI ME blog for more AI video tutorials, or jump straight into the product and try Seedance 2.0 free on VIDEO AI ME with no credit card.
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Paul Grisel
Paul Grisel is the founder of VIDEOAI.ME, dedicated to empowering creators and entrepreneurs with innovative AI-powered video solutions.
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