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What’s Changing In Home Design For 2026

The Shift We’re Seeing in Home Design Right Now

Every year, we hear the word trends and start thinking about what’s going to look new. However, what we’re really watching in 2026 is how people want their homes to feel.

This comes after years of ultra-minimal, everything-matching, perfectly-styled spaces … and almost un-lived in aesthetic. Indeed, 2025 quietly started a shift. Homes began loosening up. People wanted warmth again. Personality. A little chaos. A little romance. Spaces that felt like real life is happening inside them.

And now in 2026? That shift is fully here. Clients are asking for rooms that support their lifestyle very intentionally. Think slow mornings, kids dropping backpacks, late-night movies, hosting friends, working from home, doing skincare on the sofa. Design isn’t solely about showing off anymore. It’s about creating the feeling of home.

Butler’s pantry with blue ikat skirted base, pale gray shelves with brass rails, vintage silver, white china, and wildflowers in a vase.

At Clouz Houz, this is what we’ve always believed: no two homes should look the same because no two lives look the same. The trends we’re seeing now finally support that philosophy: layered, collected, imperfect, and deeply personal.

So these aren’t just “what’s in.” They’re signals of what people are craving: comfort, creativity, and connection.

 

1. Colorful Cabinetry & Kitchens That Don’t Match

Design: Nathan Kirkman

The end of all-white, all-same kitchens

White kitchens had their moment. Then oak had its moment. And, while I still love both, there’s a new kid in town! 2026 is about color and contrast.

We’re seeing painted cabinetry, mixed finishes, and kitchens that feel more like rooms and not sterile boxes. A soft green island, a deep blue pantry, a warm wood hood, brass hardware that doesn’t match the faucet … and that’s exactly the point.

We always say nothing in a room should match, so why would a kitchen be any different?

Your fridge doesn’t have to match your range. Your hood doesn’t have to match your cabinets. When everything is allowed to play off each other, you get depth, character, and a space that feels designed (not bought as a set).

2. The End of Open Concept Everything

Design: Melanie Lissack Interiors

Open concept isn’t gone, but open everything is. People want rooms again!

In 2026, we’re designing more zones: cozy breakfast nooks, moody TV rooms, small reading corners, layered dining spaces. People don’t want one giant room doing ten jobs. They want spaces that support different moods and rituals.

This is a huge shift toward personalization. A family that loves movie nights needs something totally different than someone who hosts dinner parties every weekend. Closing things in, creating cased openings, curtains, millwork, or layout tricks lets designers actually tailor homes to the people living there.

3. Celebrating Craftsmanship and Sustainability

Design: Studio McGee

Mass-produced, flat, overly-perfect interiors are out. What’s in? Texture, depth, and things that look touched by human hands. You should be able to feel how something was made. This is especially aligned with sustainability and seeing designers source more and more from vintage finds. There’s something pretty rewarding about finding that perfect piece for a space and knowing that it’s not only saving the landmines, but also creating a special feeling with something that has a story.

Think:

  • Saturated millwork
  • Hand-stenciled walls
  • Furniture you can tell was built, not stamped
  • Tiles with variation
  • Vintage or one-of-a-kind furniture pieces

People want homes that feel layered and soulful.

4. Pattern Drenching (Curated Maximalism)

Photo: Pinterest

Pattern drenching is exactly what it sounds like: letting patterns take over a space. Wallpaper, rugs, textiles, upholstery, even ceilings, all working together instead of being afraid of each other. We are going to see a lot more of this as people want to feel cocooned in their spaces with color and patterns, and this brings a comforting feeling to homes.

The key is curation. This isn’t chaos — it’s storytelling through pattern.

5. Lived-In, Romantic Interiors

Photo: Pinterest

For years, we were taught that homes should look untouched. But in 2026, we’re romanticizing the signs of life. There is something truly elegant in a very juxtapositional way when we live in a beautiful space but in a relaxed way. Sitting on the all- white linen sofa, eating take out pizza in a formal dining room. I think people are romanticizing how they live, so shouldn’t our interiors follow?

  • A slouchy pillow on the linen sofa
  • A cashmere throw that isn’t folded perfectly
  • Books stacked on coffee tables — the more the better
  • Open shelving with pretty dishes meant to be seen and used.
  • A bed made for naps (no more crawling into a bed with fifty pillows)

These details tell a story. Someone was here, resting, living, enjoying their space. Homes can still feel elevated and beautiful, but they don’t need to look frozen.

6. Murals & Storytelling Walls

Centered view of the round skirted table styled with blue-and-white ginger jars, looking toward a living room framed by columns and botanical wallpaper.
Design: Clouz Houz
Photo: Emily Kennedy

Painted murals, hand-drawn scenes, and illustrated walls are exploding, especially in dining rooms, powder baths, and bedrooms. 

I’ve always loved a mural for any space, and I’ve been seeing them more and more. They don’t just apply to certain rooms anymore — use in a bedroom or a powder bath to really set a tone. I think we will see a lot more of them this year, mixed with other elements that feel more contemporary to balance out the formality. 

Where This All Lands

If there’s one takeaway from the shifts we’re seeing in 2026, it’s this: homes are becoming more honest.

Less about perfection. Less about copying what’s trending online. More about how people actually live—and how they want to feel when they walk through the door.

What excites us most is that these trends aren’t asking you to start over. They’re inviting you to layer thoughtfully, invest intentionally, and make choices that support your real life. Color that feels personal. Rooms that have purpose. Materials that age beautifully. Details that tell a story.

Sage green pantry cabinets with glass doors displaying white dishes and glassware, brass hardware, and a coffee station on white counters.

At Clouz Houz, this has always been our approach. We believe great design lives in the nuance—the way finishes interact, how light moves through a space, the balance between old and new, high and low. Mixing accessible pieces with meaningful investments doesn’t mean cutting corners. It means knowing where to spend, where to save, and how to bring it all together so it feels cohesive, elevated, and effortless.

Designing a home like this takes more than good taste. It takes experience, trusted vendors, deep sourcing, technical knowledge, and an understanding of how a space will function years down the road—not just on reveal day. That’s what our clients come to us for. And, it’s why no two Clouz Houz homes ever look the same.

If these trends resonate with you, consider them an invitation—not to chase what’s “in,” but to design a home that feels deeply yours. One that supports your routines, your family, your gatherings, your quiet moments, and everything in between.

Work with us!

If you’re ready to explore what’s possible in your own space, we’d love to help you get there.
Explore our design services here and let’s start creating a home you’ll love living in for years to come!!

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Are you all ready for summer like I am?!? Our team loves pulling all the inspo and things that are shaping our design work each month. June is my favorite... for a lot of reasons, because, one: I’m a total warm weather girl and two: it’s Derrick’s and my anniversary month! I can’t believe we are celebrating 29 years next week!

Anyway, I digress... I’m breaking down all the things in today’s Between The Layers post (live at 5:00 PST). I can’t wait to share with you allllll the things we have our eyes on for projects.

I’m even sharing some items I have been debating for our house because I need your help assuring me I’m not crazy with all these ideas I have brewing.😂

Inspo imagery via Pinterest
If you’re going to be creative, you have to be willing to stay in a bit of a playful mindset... not everything can be overthought or perfectly safe, because that’s usually when things start to fall flat. I see this all the time, even in my own home, where the moments I almost didn’t do something end up being the ones I love the most. The same goes for our client work. The best spaces don’t come from playing it safe, they come from trusting the process and being open to ideas you might not have considered at first. That’s really the point of hiring a designer, especially at a higher level. You’re not bringing us in to repeat what you already know you like or to be directed every step of the way. You’re bringing us in for our perspective, our resources, and the ability to see things a little differently. We’re never going to lead you in a direction that doesn’t work, but we are going to push you a bit, because that’s where a space starts to feel more thoughtful, more layered, and ultimately a more thoughtful, refined version of your vision. Brought to life with a level of detail that’s hard to achieve without a clear plan behind it.
Part 2!

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Kaylei in the Oregon studio, while I’m in the Tennessee office together, collaborating on building out a client’s space... this is what our Premier Virtual Design actually looks like behind the scenes.

Most virtual design services stop at a moodboard, but we’re thinking through how you actually live in your home... what’s working, what’s not, and how every material fits together before you ever click “add to cart.” From detailed floor plans and elevations to fully curated selections and a complete spec guide.

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