Interior design experts predict a shift away from polished, minimalist homes toward more lived-in and personality-packed spaces in 2026. This trend emphasizes authenticity, handcrafted elements, and gradual evolution over contrived perfection. Homeowners are seeking environments that reflect personal stories and allow for organic development.
The interior design landscape for 2026 is moving toward 'lived-in interiors,' where imperfection and human touch take precedence over showroom-like finishes. As noted in design discussions, this trend counters years of overly optimized aesthetics influenced by social media, favoring rooms that feel inhabited rather than exhibited.
Lebanese designer Tarek Dada highlights the value of genuine originality amid fleeting online trends: “As [interior] design trends grow more fleeting, elements with a genuine human imprint are becoming increasingly valuable. From furniture and textiles to finishes, handcrafted pieces shaped by skill and the artisan’s touch are more sought-after than ever. People are seeking materials and objects that carry individuality and preserve the warmth of human craftsmanship.”
Practical manifestations include limewashed walls that shift with light, uneven book stacks from actual use, and vintage items showing wear. This approach aligns with the slow decorating movement, encouraging homes to evolve through use and memory rather than instant completion. It also echoes 'friction-maxxing,' a rejection of hyper-efficiency in favor of deliberate, attention-reclaiming choices like analogue over automated processes.
AD100 designer Ali Mohammadioun emphasizes designing for the individual: “To avoid overly polished interiors, we design around the individual, not the image. By choosing materials that develop character over time, incorporating art and collectable pieces with meaning, and allowing spaces to grow organically, a home feels authentic, layered, and genuinely lived-in rather than perfectly composed.” He adds that depth arises from evolution: “Imperfection makes a space feel human and lived-in. When surfaces show subtle wear, objects accumulate meaning, or moments remain slightly unresolved, the home gains personality and memory.”
Meanwhile, minimalism is evolving rather than disappearing. Paarth Chheda, President of Business Development at Sri Lotus Developers & Realty Limited, outlines five reasons for this shift to personality-packed interiors. Homeowners tire of safe, tasteful spaces and embrace expressive elements like bold artwork or textured walls. Younger buyers prioritize flexible, curated homes that reflect identity over rigid trends. Minimalism now focuses on 'less, but better and more personal,' valuing decluttering alongside emotional connection. Urban dwellers opt for smaller, characterful spaces over large, ostentatious ones, mixing eras and textures for authenticity.
This recalibration prioritizes atmospheric texture—plaster walls that move with light, unlacquered metals that deepen with touch—and visible utility, such as exposed cords. The result is homes that foster comfort through grounding presence, evolving with inhabitants for timeless appeal.