2026 Home Design Trends: What’s In, What’s Out, and What Buyers Are Responding To
After a decade of cool grays and “showroom-perfect” interiors, buyer preferences have shifted in a measurable way.What I’m seeing, both in the data and in how buyers respond in person, is a move toward homes that feel intentional, warm, and livable. Not over-designed. Not trendy for the sake of it. Just well-considered.
That shift is showing up in listing language, design reports, and ultimately in which homes sell quickly—and which ones don’t.
If you’re thinking about selling, this isn’t about chasing trends. It’s about understanding what influences buyer perception today because that directly impacts your outcome.
What’s In
Color Is Back — And It’s Warmer Than You Think
What’s Working Right Now: Warm, Cohesive Color (Not Gray-on-Gray)
Buyers have moved away from cool grays and stark whites as the default.
What’s replacing it:
- Warm neutrals (beige, caramel, taupe)
- Earth tones (terra cotta, sage, soft navy)
- “Color drenching” (one cohesive tone across walls, trim, and ceilings)
This isn’t just aesthetic—it’s psychological. Buyers are responding to spaces that feel like a place to live, not a blank canvas.
What this means for sellers:
A strategic paint refresh is still one of the highest-return updates you can make. It directly impacts:
- How your home photographs
- First impressions during showings
- Overall perceived value
The Art Deco Revival: Details That Stop the Scroll
Character Over Cookie-Cutter
Buyers are looking for just enough detail to feel considered.
That can look like:
- Subtle curves (arched openings, rounded furniture)
- Warm metals (brushed brass, layered finishes)
- Thoughtful millwork or architectural moments
This doesn’t require a remodel. It’s about adding one or two points of interest that make your home feel intentional.
Seller takeaway:
You don’t need to do everything—you need to avoid looking generic.
Photo Credit: Elizabeth Frost Designs

Surfaces and Materials That Make a Statement
Photo Credit: Verner Architects; LMB Interiors (Designer); Eric Rorer (Photographer)
Countertops and backsplashes are no longer meant to blend in. Natural stone, quartzite, marble, and travertine with soft sweeping veining is being used as a focal point rather than a background. Full-height backsplashes and dramatic stone applications create depth and warmth that photographs beautifully.2 Organic texture is showing up everywhere alongside it: plaster and limewash walls, sculpted surfaces, three-dimensional materials that shift with changing light.
Layered metals like brushed brass, paired with matte black and nickel signal a more evolved, curated take on the mixed-metals trend that’s been building for a few years. The goal is intentional, not matched. Each finish feels chosen.
The Kitchen Is Getting Personal
Credit: Leigh Ann Rowe; Builder: OC Builders Group; Designer: Studio Willow
Kitchens That Feel Personal (But Still Broadly Appealing)
The all-white kitchen isn’t gone—but it’s no longer the default.
What buyers are responding to:
- Wood tones and warmer palettes
- Transitional styles (not overly modern, not farmhouse-heavy)
- Subtle customization (a pantry, a unique finish, a thoughtful layout)
The shift is toward kitchens that feel designed—not templated.
Important nuance:
Personal doesn’t mean polarizing. The goal is considered, not risky.
Open Concept Grew Up
Defined Spaces (Without Losing Flow)
Open concept isn’t disappearing it’s evolving. Remote work is a big part of why. When your home is also your office, privacy has real value. Dedicated home offices are consistently one of the most requested features this year, and mentions of “reading nooks” quiet, defined personal spaces are up 48% in Zillow listing descriptions.1 If you’re thinking about selling and you have a defined dining room, a separate office, or distinct living zones, don’t apologize for them. Stage and describe each space as intentional. Buyers are looking for purpose, not just square footage.
Buyers now prefer:
- Connection between spaces
- With clear function and separation
We’re seeing more demand for:
- Dedicated offices
- Reading nooks
- Flexible spaces with purpose
If your home already has defined rooms, that’s a strength.
The key is how you present and stage them.
Homes That Are Designed to Feel Good
Homes That Feel Good to Be In
There’s a measurable shift toward what’s often called wellness design.
Buyers are prioritizing:
- Natural light
- Organic materials
- Quiet, usable spaces
- Spa-like bathrooms
- Connection to the outdoors
This isn’t about luxury, it’s about how a home feels on a daily basis. People are prioritizing how their home makes them feel on a Tuesday afternoon, not just how it presents at a party.
Resilient and Efficient Homes: The Practical Side of 2026 Design
Climate reality is showing up in listing data in a way that’s hard to ignore. Buyers are evaluating homes more like long-term investments.
Features that stand out:
- Energy efficiency (HVAC, insulation, solar readiness)
- EV charging
- Fire-resistant or climate-conscious upgrades
- Battery systems
These aren’t “nice to have” anymore, they’re part of how buyers evaluate value. If you have these features:
Make sure they’re clearly documented and highlighted. Buyers are actively looking for them.
flood protection, fire-resistant landscaping, and whole-home battery systems are all climbing fast — and 86% of buyers now say it’s very important that a home be “climate-proof.”1 Zero-energy-ready homes have surged 70% in Zillow listing mentions, with whole-home batteries up 40% and EV charging up 25%.1
What’s Out
Design trends don’t just tell you what to add — they tell you what to address before you list. A few things buyers have clearly moved past:
- All-gray everything. Functional for a decade, now forgettable. Buyer sentiment has shifted clearly away from both cool gray and stark white as default palettes. Sterile, clinical spaces read as dated now, not clean.2,3
- The overdone farmhouse look. The aesthetic isn’t dead, but the version heavy on purely decorative elements — shiplap for the sake of shiplap, barn doors on every opening — has peaked. What’s replacing it is a warmer, more grounded approach leaning on authentic materials over surface-level styling.
- Themed bonus rooms. “Man cave,” dedicated wine rooms, home theaters with no other use — buyers want rooms that flex, not rooms that commit to a single identity. Spaces that can’t be repurposed read as liabilities now, not amenities.
- Two-story foyers. They create a striking visual, but the trade-offs have caught up with them. NAHB data shows 32% of buyers are likely to reject a home with a two-story foyer outright, while only 13% consider it a must-have.6The energy inefficiency, heat imbalance, and lost usable square footage are no longer worth the entrance moment.
- Matched-finish everything. Coordinating every fixture, cabinet pull, and faucet to a single metal finish now reads as a 2015 renovation. The shift is toward intentionally layered metals — brushed brass, matte black, and nickel — that feel collected over time rather than sourced from the same catalog page.
- Open shelving as a kitchen default. What looked fresh a few years ago now reads as high-maintenance and visually noisy to a lot of buyers. The enthusiasm for it has cooled significantly, and the backlash is real enough that agents are recommending sellers address it before listing.11
- Safe “greige” tile that disappears into the background. Surfaces are meant to make a statement now, not blend in. Full-height backsplashes, dramatic stone, and layered finishes have replaced the disappearing neutral as the standard expectation in well-presented kitchens and baths.
- Maximalism for resale. Rich, layered, highly personal spaces can be genuinely beautiful to live in — but they’re difficult to sell. Buyers need to be able to see themselves in a space. Heavy personalization, bold collections, and visually dense rooms make that harder, which tends to show up in longer days on market and more negotiated offers.
What Actually Moves the Needle Before You List.
Buyers are deciding in seconds. The goal is to design for the feeling they get at first scroll — not the trend you were following three years ago.
Sources
- Zillow – Spotted on Zillow: Six Home Trends To Follow in 2026
- Houzz – Sneak Peek: Houzz Reveals 11 of the Top Home Design Predictions for 2026
- Axios – 2026 home design trends: Zillow and others reveal picks
- RoylinSells – Are Open Floor Plans Still Popular in Today’s Housing Market?
- Houzz – 2025 U.S. Houzz Kitchen Trends Study
- NAHB – Two-Story Foyer Trend Stabilizes in 2024
- Fixr – Kitchen Design Trends Report 2026
- Fixr – Bathroom Design Trends Report 2026
- Tami Faulkner Design – Top Custom Home Design Trend 2026
- NKBA – 2026 Design Trends Report
- GoBankingRates – 6 Key Design Trends That Are Make-or-Break for Homebuyers in 2026
- BHGRE – 2026 Design Trends Moving Real Estate

