Interior design trends for 2025

1 January 2025

2025 inspiration

The 2025 home trends look at rituals, concrete needs and a taste for quality, but also at the opportunities offered by technology.

Aware, comfortable and sophisticated: the home in 2025 is oriented to satisfy concrete needs without compromising on quality and beauty. It is aware from many points of view: environmental, because every new project cannot ignore sustainability, aesthetic, because no one wants to give up beauty, functional, because in design beauty makes no sense if it is not accompanied by the ability to satisfy concrete needs.

Comfort is one of these and it is an aspect that is appreciated more and more every day also to offer it to one’s guests. Finally, the home of 2025 is sophisticated, in the sense of oriented towards production quality, seeking quality manufacturing and materials and workmanship that last over time, even in style.

Design for gatherings

Among the 2025 trends for the living area, the “design for gatherings” category is becoming increasingly strong and interesting, that is, architecture and furnishings designed for convivial moments.

Gubi Beetle Dining Chair
Gubi 2.0 Round Dining Table

Not only the living room but also, above all, the dining area, imagined welcoming guests with comfort and beauty because food is increasingly an element of connection between people. It is no coincidence that Gubi relaunches the dining table in its essential beauty with the Gubi 2.0 collection and the now iconic Beetle chairs by Gamfratesi.

Also interesting in this category is the new Hikari bar cabinet by HBA-Hirsch Bedner Associates for Giorgetti: a cabinet with a dual vocation, storage and display, with backlit smoked glass shelves.

Giorgetti Hikari

Wireless

As mentioned, design in 2025 captures new technologies to decline them by reconciling style and function. This is the case of wireless technologies and of rechargeable lamps to which companies, designers and users have now converted with conviction. To bring light exactly where it is needed in a versatile and flexible way, even outdoors, and create custom-made lighting architectures and accents.

Among the latest lamps introduced in this category is Pose by Tom Dixon, in two variants: the larger task light and the smaller, rechargeable portable one.

Four seasons outdoor

Another theme that is gaining strength in 2025 is that of outdoor furniture, no longer designed just for summer but also for the other seasons.

An example is the Tod lamp by Talenti: designed by Marco Acerbis, it is an outdoor floor lamp that also contains a heating system capable of generating heat on a 7m2 surface.

For furniture, among the most interesting new features is the outdoor version of the Embrace collection by the EOOS studio for Carl Hansen & Søn, consisting of a modular sofa and a coffee table in untreated teak.

Marble

There is growing attention and research into quality manufacturing and materials, combined with a design that stands the test of time. The trend as a rapid rise and fall gives way to the desire for a product that is always beautiful, with character and long-lasting.

Giorgetti Mistral

Among the materials, the taste for marble returns, natural, strong and sculptural. This is how it appears in the Mistral dining table by Studio Dainelli for Giorgetti, original and refined, with sculptural and unexpected lines. As well as the Flow washbasin by Antonio Lupi, an authentic work of art in marble characterized by the frayed and wavy profile that enhances the contemporary beauty of this material.

Antoniolupi Flow

Iconic Design

Finally, in 2025 the attention to iconic design is confirmed, to projects that have successfully resisted the test of time and still stand out today for their beauty and intelligence. Like the Cornaro sofa designed by Carlo Scarpa in 1973 and now produced by Cassina.

Cassina Cornaro

The geometric lines of the structure frame the padded elements making the whole new and perfect. And the Jota collection by Jasper Morrison for Fredericia is a new icon: the English architect was inspired by the work of the Danish designer Børge Mogensen and this mix of British taste and Nordic minimalism is perfect and balanced.