The Studio by Nandita Manwani

Interior Design Trends of 2025: What We Saw While Working with Real Home Owners This Year

What 2025 has shown us is that people are designing homes for themselves — not for display, not for guests, and not for trends. Spaces are becoming simpler, smarter, warmer, and far more personal.

Every year the world of interiors throws up a few surprises, and 2025 has been no different.
What’s interesting is that these changes haven’t come from magazines or Pinterest boards—they’ve come from real families, real homes, and real lifestyle shifts.

Here’s a quick round-up of the trends we’ve consistently seen while designing homes in Bangalore this year.

1. Less Socialising at Home → Smaller Seating Needs

Somewhere between the Zoom fatigue and the rise of “meet-outside” culture, people have stopped hosting as much. And the home is showing it.

That massive 10–12 seater living room setup that used to be the “modern Indian dream” has quietly lost relevance.
Most families today prefer:

  • One comfortable main sofa
  • A couple of accent chairs
  • More free space to move around rather than extensive seating “for guests”

Living rooms are becoming spaces for the people who actually use them every day — not for hypothetical weekend gatherings.

2. Quick Commerce = Smaller Storage

Remember when the kitchen needed a “grocery room,” 30 dabba-sized shelves, and a tall pantry packed with atta, dal and snacks for months?
Well, thanks to 10-minute grocery apps, that era is officially over.

Homeowners no longer feel the need to stock up in bulk. Instead, we’re seeing:

  • Compact, easy-to-maintain pantries
  • Shallow, more accessible storage rather than deep cabinets
  • Smarter organisers instead of sheer volume

Kitchens today are far leaner and more efficient — designed for daily life, not for hoarding.

3. Minimalism… but with a Touch of Elegance

Minimalism in India has gone through an interesting evolution. A few years ago, it meant bare walls,
straight lines, and homes that looked like show flats — beautiful, but not always practical.

2025 has brought a more graceful, more “Indian” version of minimalism.

Homeowners now want spaces that feel calm without being cold and simple without being sparse.
The colours are muted, yes, but the textures are richer. Furniture has clean lines but carries warmth.
Lighting is soft and welcoming. Natural materials—wood, stone, woven fabrics—bring character without adding clutter.

It’s minimalism that feels lived-in, warm, and quietly elegant.
Not the stark version borrowed from western magazines, but a version that genuinely fits Indian homes and lifestyles.

4. Post-Covid Habit Continues → More Gadgets, More Automation

The Covid era forced everyone to rethink how a home functions without relying entirely on domestic help.
And even in 2025, that habit hasn’t gone away.

Families are actively planning for gadgets and automation right from the design stage:

  • Dishwashers are standard now
  • Robot vacuum docks are finding permanent homes
  • Smart lighting, curtains, and appliance control are almost mainstream

It’s no longer about “Can we fit a dishwasher?” but “Which one, and where will it integrate best?”

Homes are being designed to run efficiently — even if the helping hands are fewer.

5. Reading is Back — And So Are Hobbies

Screens took over for a few years, but 2025 showed a refreshing revival — reading corners are back in demand.

We’re creating cosy nooks with a single lounge chair, a warm lamp, a few ledges for books, and soft textures.

Along with that, indoor hobbies are getting dedicated spaces again:

  • A piano or keyboard corner
  • Craft stations
  • Board game drawers
  • Carrom tables
  • Model-building or painting desks

Homes are shifting from entertainment to engagement — a subtle but beautiful change.

The Big Picture: Homes Are Becoming Human Again

So, what is the big picture emerging in residential interior design this year, one might ask?
Quite simply: Homes are becoming human again.

What 2025 has shown us is that people are designing homes for themselves — not for display, not for guests, and not for trends.

Spaces are becoming simpler, smarter, warmer, and far more personal.
And honestly, that’s the most meaningful design shift we could have hoped for.

 

Signing Off

Nandita

PS: On proofreading this post I was reminded of something similar I had written way back in 2020. That one was about lifestyle based interior design. If you found the sentiment in the above post relevant then you may like that one too – it is here https://thestudiobangalore.com/blog/2020/06/be-proud-to-be-you

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