As we move through 2026, interior design trends shift toward creating homes that feel personally meaningful, comfortable, and thoughtfully curated. Rather than following rigid style rules, this year's decorating approach emphasizes authenticity, sustainability, and spaces that genuinely support how you live.
Warm, earthy colour palettes
Cool greys that dominated interiors for the past decade are giving way to warmer, more organic tones. Terracotta, warm ochres, soft clay shades, and muted sage greens create welcoming atmospheres that feel grounded and calming.
These earthy palettes work across different design styles and provide versatile backdrops for furniture and accessories. They're also more forgiving than stark whites or cool greys, aging gracefully and hiding minor marks better. If commitment to bold wall colours feels daunting, introduce these tones through soft furnishings, artwork, or accent pieces.
Natural materials take centre stage
Wood, stone, linen, wool, rattan, and clay are replacing synthetic materials in well-considered interiors. This shift reflects growing environmental awareness and desire for tactile, authentic materials that improve with age rather than simply wearing out.
Wooden furniture with visible grain, natural stone worktops, linen curtains, and wool rugs add textural depth and visual interest. Mix different natural materials within rooms to avoid monotony. Combine smooth plastered walls with rough-hewn wood, pair polished stone with soft textiles, or contrast woven rattan with crisp linen.
Curved furniture and softer lines
Sharp angles and strictly geometric furniture are softening. Curved sofas, rounded armchairs, oval dining tables, and arched mirrors introduce gentle, flowing lines that feel more relaxed and welcoming.
These softer silhouettes work particularly well in open-plan spaces, where they help define areas without harsh visual boundaries. If replacing major furniture pieces isn't feasible, introduce curves through smaller elements like rounded mirrors, circular side tables, or accessories with organic shapes.
Maximalism meets mindful curation
After years of minimalist interiors, decorative expression is returning, but with thoughtful editing. This isn't about cluttering spaces with random objects, but rather displaying meaningful items, collections, and artwork that tell your story.
Gallery walls, displayed collections, layered textiles, and decorative objects create personality and visual interest. The key is curation, each item should serve a purpose, whether functional, beautiful, or meaningful. Consider what genuinely brings you joy or holds significance. Family heirlooms, travel souvenirs, art from local makers, or beloved books all contribute to spaces that feel distinctly yours.
Sustainable and vintage choices
Environmental consciousness influences decorating decisions increasingly. Sourcing vintage and second-hand furniture, choosing sustainable materials, supporting local craftspeople, and investing in quality pieces that last decades rather than following fast-furniture trends all reflect this shift.
Vintage pieces add character and uniqueness impossible to achieve with mass-produced items. A well-made mid-century sideboard or antique dining table becomes a focal point whilst telling a story. Consider furniture's entire lifecycle, solid wood pieces can be refinished, reupholstered, or repurposed.
Functional spaces with flexible purpose
How we use our homes continues evolving. Dedicated home offices, multi-purpose spaces that adapt throughout the day, and zones within larger rooms reflect ongoing flexibility needs from hybrid working and changing lifestyles.
Create spaces that serve multiple functions through thoughtful furniture choices and smart storage. A dining table doubles as workspace, guest bedrooms incorporate desk areas, and living rooms include defined reading corners.
Bringing the outdoors in
Houseplants remain popular, but the approach is maturing. Rather than filling every surface with greenery, thoughtful plant placement where they'll thrive creates more successful results. Consider each plant's needs and your ability to care for it properly. A few healthy, well-placed plants create more impact than numerous struggling specimens.
Beyond plants, nature-inspired patterns, botanical prints, and natural colour palettes maintain connections to the outdoors year-round.
Personal expression over perfection
Perhaps the overarching trend for 2026 is permission to create spaces that genuinely reflect your personality and lifestyle. Homes that feel lived-in, loved, and personal trump magazine-perfect spaces that don't accommodate real life. Mix styles you love, display items with meaning, choose colours that make you happy, and create spaces that support your actual daily activities.
Contact us for more ideas on making improvements that will help increase your property's value