After a decade of cool grays, crisp whites, and spaces that looked more like showrooms than homes, buyers have changed what they're looking for. Call it quiet luxury — the idea that richness comes from depth, craft, and intention rather than flash and excess. It's not maximalism. It's a shift toward spaces that feel like somewhere you'd actually want to live.
That shift is showing up in buyer data, listing descriptions, and design reports across the board. Here's what it looks like in practice — and what it means if you're thinking about selling your home.
What's In
Color Is Back — And It's Warmer Than You Think
The all-gray interior isn't just tired. Buyers have moved on. The biggest shift in Zillow listing descriptions over the last year has been a surge in "color drenching" — coating walls, ceilings, and trim in a single immersive hue — up 149% year over year.1 The direction is consistent across paint brands and design reports: warm beiges, caramels, terra cotta, sage green, and soft navy. A mix of '70s sunbaked tones and calming naturals.3
The psychology behind it makes sense. Buyers are increasingly seeking homes that feel like a sanctuary, not a showroom, and warm cohesive color is one of the fastest ways to create that. If you're thinking about selling your home, this has a practical implication: a single well-chosen paint refresh can dramatically change how a space photographs and how it feels at first walk-through.
The Art Deco Revival: Details That Stop the Scroll
Buyers are actively looking for character — and that's showing up clearly in what design platforms are tracking. Houzz flagged the Art Deco revival as one of the defining trends of 2026, with searches for Art Deco interiors up 22% year over year.2 Think chevron patterns, brass accents, jewel tones, curves, arches, and scalloped edges that soften spaces and add visual depth. Listing mentions of "artisan craftsmanship" are up 21% and "vintage accents" up 17%.1
The good news is this doesn't require a gut renovation....