Design Trends — 2026

How Homes Are Feeling Right Now

The biggest shift in interiors this year isn't a colour or a material — it's a mood. Homes are being designed to feel something. Here's what's defining the best spaces in 2026 and how to bring it into yours.

Primo Projects April 2026 10 min read

For years, the dominant language of interiors was visual. How does it look on camera? Is it clean? Is it minimal? Is it Instagram-ready? In 2026, that conversation has shifted. The question designers — and increasingly homeowners — are asking is different: how does it feel?

Cool greys and stark whites are stepping aside. Rigid geometries are softening. The home is no longer being designed as a backdrop — it's being designed as an experience. This guide covers the six trends shaping UK interiors in 2026 and, more importantly, how to actually use them without your home looking like a mood board.

Warm minimalist living room with earthy tones 2026

The shift toward warm, layered, and tactile interiors is the defining story of 2026


01

The Big Mood Shift

The story of 2026 interiors is a story about authenticity. After years of homes that looked polished but felt sterile, the pendulum has swung hard in the other direction. The homes that feel most considered right now are layered, personal, and slightly imperfect — and that's entirely intentional.

Three things are driving this. First, we're spending more time at home than ever, and spaces that look great but feel uncomfortable have become intolerable. Second, wellness — genuine wellbeing, not just candles and plants — has moved from luxury to mainstream, and people want their homes to actively support how they feel. Third, sustainability has shifted from trend to expectation: materials that age beautifully, finishes that develop character over time, and pieces chosen for decades rather than seasons.

The result is a design language that's warm, tactile, grounded, and deeply human. Less showroom. More story.



03

The 2026 Palette

The defining characteristic of 2026's colour palette is warmth — but not loudness. These are colours that envelop rather than shout. Cool greys have been largely abandoned. The new neutrals are nature-led: the inside of a walnut shell, old limestone, dark forest earth, the skin of unpolished stone.

```
Cloud Dancer
Warm Sand
Raw Umber
Olive Grove
Smoked Oak
Terracotta

Cloud Dancer — Pantone's Colour of the Year for 2026 — anchors the palette. It's a soft, creamy white that feels generous and warm rather than stark. Terracotta and Raw Umber are the accent choices of the year — earthy, grounding, and versatile. Olive Grove is the green of the moment: muted, sophisticated, and far removed from the bright botanicals of earlier years.

Use the lightest tones (Cloud Dancer, Warm Sand) on the largest surfaces — walls and ceilings — and bring in the deeper tones (Raw Umber, Smoked Oak, Terracotta) through furniture, textiles, and joinery. The contrast between them is what creates depth.

One technique worth noting: tonal decorating — using three or four shades of the same colour family across a room — is delivering some of the most striking and cohesive results this year. A bedroom layered in warm whites and soft clays feels both rich and restful in a way that no single paint colour achieves alone.

```

04

Materials to Know

In 2026, how something feels matters as much as how it looks. The materials driving the most interesting interiors right now share a common quality: they improve with age rather than deteriorating. They develop patina, character, and stories.

``` Limewash plaster wall warm interior

Limewash plaster creates depth and warmth no flat paint can replicate

The Materials Defining 2026

Limewash plaster: The wall treatment of the year. Unlike flat emulsion paint, limewash creates subtle variation in tone — no two walls look the same. It breathes, it ages gracefully, and it photographs beautifully.

Unlacquered brass and bronze: Hardware and fixtures in these finishes develop a living patina over time, quietly recording the touch of the people who use them. They look expensive when new and better when old.

Burl and smoked oak: High-character woods with visible grain, knots, and figuring are being specified in everything from kitchen joinery to bedroom furniture. The more expressive the wood, the better.

Bouclé and chunky weaves: Textured weaves — bouclé, heavy linen, chunky knits — add tactile warmth that velvet and plain fabrics don't deliver, and they work across almost any colour palette.

Travertine and honed stone: Natural stone with characteristic pitting and veining is appearing across kitchens, bathrooms, and living spaces. The softer, honed finish is preferred over polished: more grounded, fewer fingerprints.

Handmade ceramics: Mass-produced accessories are being replaced by pieces that show their making. A shelf of considered ceramics does more for a room than any amount of matching accessories.

```

05

Room by Room

The 2026 aesthetic plays out differently in each room. Here's what the most considered spaces look like right now — and the one decision in each room that makes the biggest difference.

```

Kitchen

The most striking kitchens this year feature handleless shaker-style cabinetry in deep, muted tones — forest greens, rich navies, warm charcoals — contrasted against raw stone or warm-toned quartz worktops. Islands are larger and designed for people to gather around. The single biggest upgrade: unlacquered brass or bronze hardware.

Living Room

Living rooms in 2026 are being built around a single sculptural focal piece — usually a curved sofa or statement armchair in a textured weave. Limewash walls in warm terracotta or clay tones, layered lighting with a floor lamp and table lamp, and a natural fibre rug anchoring the furniture. The coffee table: raw stone or solid wood.

Bedroom

Bedrooms are designed as genuine retreats. Tonal layering works beautifully here: walls in soft clay or warm white, linen bedding in a slightly deeper tone, a textured throw in the same family. No overhead ceiling light — side lamps only. The effect is restorative rather than functional.

Bathroom

The 2026 bathroom features fluted or ribbed tile in warm stone tones, a freestanding bath or large walk-in shower, a vanity unit in warm timber, and warm-toned lighting. Heated towel rails in brushed bronze. The finish that makes the biggest difference: floor-to-ceiling tiling — it makes any bathroom feel larger and more considered instantly.

Spa bathroom fluted tiles warm stone tones

Floor-to-ceiling fluted stone tile and warm-toned hardware — the 2026 bathroom benchmark

Home Office

The home office is being designed as a proper room. Built-in shelving and joinery that frames a desk creates a space that feels intentional rather than improvised. Acoustic panels in natural wool or felt, warm task lighting, a quality chair, and one plant that's large enough to matter.

```

06

How to Apply It

You don't need a full renovation to bring the best of 2026's design thinking into your home. Here are six practical starting points.

```
01
Change the Lighting First

Swap cool-white bulbs for 2700K warm white and add one floor lamp. Under £100, and it makes every other design decision look better.

02
Paint One Wall in Limewash

One chimney breast or bedroom wall in limewash introduces texture, warmth, and character without a room-wide commitment.

03
Replace Hardware

Kitchen and bathroom hardware in unlacquered brass or bronze delivers a significant visual impact for a fraction of the cost of new cabinetry.

04
Add a Natural Fibre Rug

A jute, sisal, or wool rug anchors furniture, adds acoustic softness, and introduces natural material instantly. Go larger than you think.

05
Edit Rather Than Add

Remove three things from every surface before adding anything new. Curated is always better than collected.

06
Invest in One Statement Piece

A sculptural armchair, a proper pendant light, a piece of original artwork. One considered piece elevates everything around it.

```

Our Take

"The best interiors of 2026 don't follow trends — they use them. There's a difference between a home that looks like a mood board and one that feels genuinely considered."

What we're seeing in the most successful projects this year is a consistent commitment to quality over quantity, warmth over perfection, and materials that improve with age. The homes that feel special aren't the ones that spent the most — they're the ones where every decision was made with intention.

Whether you're planning a full renovation or simply want to refresh a room, the principles are the same: start with how you want the space to feel, choose materials that earn their place, and resist the urge to fill every surface. The most beautiful rooms almost always have more space in them than you'd expect.

If you're planning a renovation and want to make sure the design is as considered as the build, we'd love to be involved from the start. That's where the best results come from.

Design & Build with Primo Projects

If any of these trends have sparked ideas for your home, we'd love to help you bring them to life. At Primo Projects, we combine thoughtful design with expert building — so your vision doesn't just look great on paper, it gets delivered exactly as you imagined. Whether you're planning a full renovation or refreshing a single room, our team will guide you through every decision, every material, and every detail. Let's start with a conversation.

Book a Consultation

Related

18/04/2026

The Smartest Room You Already Own

18/04/2026

Kitchen & Bathrooms Done Right

18/04/2026

Going Up Or Going Out?