Every interior design style DecorAI supports
DecorAI is an AI interior design app for iOS, Android, and web that helps users redesign rooms, interiors, exteriors, and gardens from photos. Browse the full library below — each style has a definition, key elements, and an AI-generated example.
Last updated: May 2026
Warm minimalism
Calm, natural, low-stimulation rooms.

Japandi
Japandi is a hybrid interior style that blends Japanese minimalism with Scandinavian warmth — natural materials, low furniture, muted palettes, and an emphasis on intentional simplicity.

Wabi-Sabi
Wabi-sabi is a Japanese aesthetic that finds beauty in imperfection, asymmetry, and natural aging — designed homes that feel quiet, weathered, and grounded.

Minimalist
Minimalist interior design strips a space down to its essentials — a small number of carefully chosen pieces, neutral palettes, and zero visual clutter.

Scandinavian
Scandinavian interior design is a Nordic style centered on light, simplicity, and natural materials, designed to feel bright and welcoming during long dark winters.

Zen / Japanese
Zen interior design draws on Japanese aesthetics to create a calm, low-stimulation space — empty surfaces, natural materials, and intentional simplicity.

Contemporary
Contemporary interior design refers to the prevailing look of the current decade — typically blending modern minimalism with softer textures, current color trends, and curved silhouettes.
Modern classics
Foundational 20th- and 21st-century styles.

Modern
Modern interior design is a 20th-century style defined by clean lines, neutral palettes, uncluttered surfaces, and a focus on function over ornament.

Mid-Century Modern
Mid-Century Modern is a 1950s-60s style defined by tapered legs, organic curves, walnut warmth, and an optimistic, atomic-age feel.

Transitional
Transitional interior design sits between traditional and contemporary — keeping classic silhouettes but pairing them with cleaner lines, restrained palettes, and modern details.

Bauhaus
Bauhaus interior design is a German modernist style from the 1920s — primary colors, geometric form, tubular steel, and design that values function before decoration.

Urban Loft
Urban Loft interior design adapts industrial loft architecture into a modern home — exposed structure, double-height ceilings, and a mix of contemporary and salvaged pieces.

Industrial
Industrial interior design uses exposed structural elements — brick, concrete, steel, and reclaimed wood — to celebrate the raw bones of a building.
Cozy and lived-in
Warm, layered, character-driven rooms.

Farmhouse
Farmhouse interior design draws on rural American homes — rustic woods, vintage accents, warm whites, shiplap walls, and a comfortable, lived-in feel.

Modern Farmhouse
Modern Farmhouse is a contemporary update of traditional farmhouse style — keeping the warmth and rustic touches but swapping fussy details for cleaner lines and a tighter palette.

Rustic
Rustic interior design celebrates raw, natural materials — exposed beams, rough timber, stone fireplaces, and a warm, cabin-in-the-woods atmosphere.

Shabby Chic
Shabby Chic interior design pairs distressed pastel finishes with vintage florals, lace, and feminine softness for a romantic, cottage-like feel.

French Country
French Country interior design captures the warmth of rural Provençal homes — washed creams, soft florals, distressed wood, and a relaxed, lavender-scented elegance.

Craftsman
Craftsman interior design is the American Arts and Crafts style — built-in woodwork, exposed joinery, leaded glass, and a warm honey-oak palette.
Global and richly patterned
Color, texture, and storytelling-driven styles.

Bohemian (Boho)
Bohemian interior design is an eclectic, layered style built around global textiles, plants, vintage finds, and a relaxed, unmatched feel.

Moroccan
Moroccan interior design combines rich color, intricate pattern, layered textiles, and metallic detail for a warm, sensory, North African feel.

Tuscan
Tuscan interior design captures the warmth of central Italian farmhouses — terracotta, ochre, plaster walls, heavy wood beams, and Old-World materials.

Mediterranean
Mediterranean interior design draws on coastal homes from Spain, Italy, Greece, and southern France — terracotta floors, plastered walls, blue-and-white tiles, and abundant natural light.

Tropical
Tropical interior design uses lush plants, natural rattan, palm prints, and bright accents to create a relaxed, vacation-home feel.

Eclectic
Eclectic interior design is the deliberate mixing of styles, periods, and origins — held together by repeated color, texture, or proportion.
Bold and glamorous
Statement palettes and luxe finishes.

Art Deco
Art Deco is a 1920s-30s style defined by glamour, geometry, and luxe materials — brass, lacquer, velvet, marble, and bold symmetrical patterns.

Hollywood Regency
Hollywood Regency is a glamorous mid-century style born in 1930s-50s Beverly Hills — high-gloss lacquer, jewel tones, mirrored furniture, and theatrical proportions.

Maximalist
Maximalist interior design is the deliberate opposite of minimalism — bold colors, layered patterns, abundant art, and a curated feeling of more is more.

Traditional
Traditional interior design draws on 18th- and 19th-century European homes — symmetry, layered fabrics, formal silhouettes, and timeless palettes.

Hamptons
Hamptons interior design is an East Coast preppy-coastal style — relaxed but polished, with navy, white, soft blues, natural linen, and elegant nautical references.

Coastal
Coastal interior design captures the feel of beach houses — light, airy, breezy, with whites, soft blues, natural fibers, and references to the sea.
All 30 styles, A–Z
Every style supported by DecorAI, alphabetical.
- Art Deco
- Bauhaus
- Bohemian (Boho)
- Coastal
- Contemporary
- Craftsman
- Eclectic
- Farmhouse
- French Country
- Hamptons
- Hollywood Regency
- Industrial
- Japandi
- Maximalist
- Mediterranean
- Mid-Century Modern
- Minimalist
- Modern
- Modern Farmhouse
- Moroccan
- Rustic
- Scandinavian
- Shabby Chic
- Traditional
- Transitional
- Tropical
- Tuscan
- Urban Loft
- Wabi-Sabi
- Zen / Japanese
Interior design styles — FAQ
How many interior design styles does DecorAI support?
What is the most popular interior design style in 2026?
What's the difference between Modern and Contemporary interior design?
Can I mix two interior design styles?
How do I know which interior design style is right for my home?
Are AI-generated interior design styles accurate to the real style?
Try any of these styles on your room
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