
A single room makeover costs 100-300 € when you learn how to decorate on a budget — paint, textiles, and decluttering deliver 80% of the transformation. Preview any change in your own room with Homeify before spending a cent.
The biggest myth in home decorating is that beautiful rooms require big budgets. They do not. The rooms you admire on social media were not all designed by expensive professionals — many were transformed with a can of paint, a trip to the thrift store, and a weekend of rearranging.
The secret is knowing where each euro makes the biggest visual difference. A fresh coat of paint on a single accent wall changes a room more than a new sofa. Swapping cushion covers and adding one plant does more than replacing an entire bookshelf. And decluttering — the one change that costs absolutely nothing — often makes the most dramatic difference of all.
This guide breaks down home decorating ideas on a budget room by room with specific prices, zero-cost ideas you can do today, and DIY home decor ideas that cost less than a restaurant dinner. Whether you are refreshing a tired living room, decorating your apartment on a budget, or decorating your first home after moving in, every recommendation fits a real budget of 100-500 € total.
Before purchasing anything, photograph your room and test different styles with Homeify — the app shows you exactly how a new paint color, furniture layout, or design direction looks in your actual space. That alone can save you from expensive mistakes.
The living room gets the most daily use and the most visitor attention, so every euro spent here delivers maximum impact when decorating on a budget.

One painted accent wall behind the sofa or TV transforms the entire room. Choose a deep tone — navy blue, forest green, or warm terracotta — that contrasts with your other walls. A 2.5L can of quality paint covers a standard 10-12 m² wall and costs 15-25 €. Add painter’s tape for clean edges (5 €) and a foam roller (3-5 €). Total: under 40 € for a change that looks like a professional redesign.
For renters who cannot paint, removable peel-and-stick wallpaper achieves a similar effect for 20-45 € per wall and leaves no trace when you move out.

New cushion covers are the fastest, cheapest way to update a living room. Buy 4-5 covers in coordinating tones — mix textures like linen, velvet, and knit rather than matching patterns. Budget: 5-15 € each at stores like IKEA, H&M Home, or Action.
Add a throw blanket draped on the sofa arm (10-25 €) and you have changed the room’s entire color palette for under 80 €. If curtains look dated, replacing them with simple linen panels in a neutral shade costs 15-30 € per window at budget retailers.
The difference between a tired living room and a refreshed one is often just 50-200 € and a weekend. Before committing to a paint color, test it in your actual room with Homeify — the before-and-after comparison takes 30 seconds and prevents expensive regrets.
Kitchen renovations cost thousands, but budget home decor ideas can refresh the space for 50-150 € and make it feel brand new. The kitchen is the room where small details matter most — hardware, lighting, and counter styling account for the overall impression far more than the cabinets themselves.

Replacing cabinet handles is the highest-impact kitchen change per euro. Old brass or plastic knobs make even new cabinets look dated. Matte black or brushed steel handles cost 2-5 € each at hardware stores. For a standard kitchen with 15-20 handles, budget 30-80 €. The swap takes one screwdriver and an hour.

Remove the doors from one or two upper cabinets — free — and display matching dishes, jars, or plants inside. Alternatively, mount a simple wooden shelf (a pine plank cut to size at any hardware store costs 8-15 €, L-brackets 5-10 €) above the counter. Style it with a few cookbooks, a plant, and glass jars filled with pasta or spices.
Clear everything off the counter except 3 intentional items: a wooden cutting board leaned against the backsplash (you already own one), a small plant in a simple pot (5-10 €), and one attractive container for everyday items like olive oil or utensils. The result looks curated rather than cluttered.
A kitchen that felt cluttered yesterday can look magazine-ready today for under 150 €. Photograph your kitchen before and after the hardware swap — the visual difference is striking, and Homeify lets you preview the transformation before picking up a screwdriver.
The bedroom is where textile changes have the most impact because fabric dominates the visual space.

New bedding transforms a bedroom overnight. You do not need luxury linen — a crisp white duvet cover in cotton percale costs 25-50 € at IKEA, H&M Home, or La Redoute sales. White bedding photographs beautifully, matches any wall color, and looks fresh for years — the same principle that makes white bedrooms so popular in interior design.
Add 2 large square cushions (10-15 € each) and a textured throw folded at the foot of the bed (15-25 €). The hotel-bedroom effect costs under 100 € total.
If you lack a headboard, paint the wall behind the bed in a rich, cocooning shade — charcoal, deep blue, or sage green. This creates a visual headboard effect that frames the bed without any furniture purchase. One accent wall behind a standard double bed uses roughly 2.5L of paint: 15-25 €.
Replace harsh overhead lighting with a warm bedside lamp (10-20 € at thrift stores or budget retailers). Use a bulb at 2700K color temperature — warm white — which creates a cozy atmosphere that overhead fixtures cannot match. A simple paper pendant lamp from IKEA costs 5-15 € and softens the room instantly.
The before-and-after in a bedroom is dramatic: a dark room with mismatched bedding becomes a serene retreat for 60-150 €. Try different wall colors in your bedroom with Homeify before buying paint — what looks perfect in a store swatch can feel completely different on a 12 m² wall.
Bathrooms are small, so even tiny changes create a noticeable difference. Budget: 30-80 €.
A cluttered bathroom transforms into a spa-like space for 30-80 € — the before-and-after is one of the most satisfying in the house. Visualize a modern bathroom style in your space with Homeify to find the right color direction before buying towels.
The entryway sets expectations for your entire home. Even a narrow hallway can feel intentional with 15-50 €.
A slim console table — no deeper than 30 cm — fits the narrowest corridor. Check secondhand platforms like Vinted or Le Bon Coin for one at 10-30 €. Place a tray for keys on top, a basket for scarves underneath, and lean a mirror behind it. You have created a functional entryway station that welcomes visitors with style.
If space is extremely limited, a wall-mounted coat rack with a shelf (15-25 €) plus a small mirror (10-15 € at a flea market) does the job.
The entryway before-and-after is the most visible in your home — visitors notice the change immediately. Use Homeify to test whether a warm or neutral palette works best in your hallway before committing.
Before spending anything, exhaust these zero-cost transformations that professionals use in every project:
For those who enjoy making things, these DIY home decor ideas on a budget deliver the most visual impact for minimum cost — all under 50 €:
Collect 5-8 frames in mixed sizes from thrift stores (2-5 € each). Print black-and-white photographs, botanical illustrations, or typography posters at home or at a print shop for 1-3 € each. Lay out the arrangement on the floor first, then hang them in a grid or salon-style cluster. A gallery wall fills an empty wall and gives the room personality that no single piece of art can match.
Transform an old nightstand, chair, or shelf unit with a single can of chalk paint (12-20 €). Sand lightly, apply 2 coats, and you have a piece that looks custom. Matte black or white works with any style. For a Scandinavian look, try pale gray or soft mint green.
A wooden plank (5-8 €) plus thick cotton rope (3-5 €) creates a hanging shelf for plants or small objects. Drill two holes on each side of the plank, thread rope through, and knot at your desired height. Mount with two ceiling hooks. The result looks like a boutique purchase but costs under 15 €.
Wooden crates from wine shops or fruit markets (often free if you ask) become wall-mounted shelves, bedside tables, or stacked storage units. Sand the surface, apply a coat of white or natural wood stain (8-12 €), and mount horizontally on the wall or stack vertically beside the bed. Three crates stacked create a rustic bookshelf for under 15 € that holds books, plants, and decorative objects.
Old glass jars become bathroom storage for cotton pads and cotton buds. Vintage suitcases stack into a side table with built-in storage. A ladder from a flea market (10-20 €) leans against a wall to hold towels, blankets, or plants on each rung.
Even on a tight budget, certain mistakes waste both money and effort:
Not every decoration euro is equal. This priority matrix helps you allocate a limited budget where it matters most:
Spend more on:
Save aggressively on:
| Room | Budget Range | Time | Key Changes | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Living Room | 50-200 € | 1 weekend | Accent wall, textiles, declutter | ★★★★★ |
| Kitchen | 50-150 € | 1 day | Hardware, open shelf, counter styling | ★★★★☆ |
| Bedroom | 60-150 € | 1 weekend | Bedding, headboard wall, lighting | ★★★★★ |
| Bathroom | 30-80 € | 2 hours | Towels, curtain, plant, dispenser | ★★★☆☆ |
| Entryway | 15-50 € | 1 hour | Console/shelf, mirror, tray | ★★★★☆ |
| Any Room (free) | 0 € | 1-3 hours | Declutter, rearrange, relocate | ★★★★☆ |
Learning how to decorate your apartment on a budget comes with constraints — you often cannot paint, drill, or make permanent changes. Here are solutions that work within those limits:
In a studio or small apartment, every object must justify its existence. Our guide on decorating a small living room covers this in depth. Decorating a studio apartment on a budget requires a focused approach:
Decorating your home on a budget does not mean falling behind on trends. Several of the most popular looks in 2026 are inherently affordable:
Warm minimalism — the biggest shift from sterile all-white minimalism toward warmer tones: beige, cream, honey, and warm gray. Achievable by repainting one wall in a warm neutral (15-25 €) and swapping cool-toned accessories for earthy ones.
Curved and organic shapes — rounded mirrors, arched shelves, and organic-shaped vases replace sharp geometric lines. A round mirror from a thrift store (10-25 €) or a hand-shaped ceramic vase (8-15 € at budget stores) introduces this trend instantly.
Secondhand as style statement — buying vintage and preloved is no longer a compromise. In 2026 it signals environmental awareness and personal taste. The best pieces come from Emmaüs, estate sales, and Vinted — often unique items that cannot be found in any store.
Textured walls — limewash paint, Venetian plaster effects, and textured finishes add depth to any room. DIY limewash paint (available at 25-40 € per can) creates a soft, cloud-like effect that looks expensive. One feature wall takes an afternoon and delivers a result that rivals professional decorating.
Nature indoors — dried flowers, branches, stones, and driftwood collected from walks cost nothing and add warmth that manufactured objects cannot replicate. A single branch in a tall vase or a bowl of collected stones on a coffee table reads as intentional and on-trend for 2026.
Some design styles naturally cost less because they rely on simplicity, secondhand finds, or raw materials:
Use Homeify to preview which style works best in your actual room before committing to any purchases.
Where you shop matters as much as what you buy. Here are the best sources ranked by value:
Start with zero-cost changes: declutter every surface, rearrange furniture to improve flow, and relocate decorative objects between rooms. Then invest in high-impact, low-cost upgrades — a single accent wall in paint costs 15-25 €, new throw pillow covers run 5-15 € each, and thrift store finds can fill gaps for under 20 €. Prioritize changes visible from the front door first.
Paint is the single most transformative change per euro spent — one accent wall costs 15-25 € and takes an afternoon. Add new cushion covers in coordinating tones (30-80 € total), drape a throw blanket on the sofa arm (10-25 €), and rearrange furniture away from walls for better flow. A complete living room refresh costs 50-200 €.
In a small studio, use color zoning instead of walls — a warm rug defines the living area, a different palette marks the sleeping zone. Peel-and-stick wallpaper (20-45 € per wall) adds personality without permanent changes. Focus on dual-purpose furniture, vertical storage, and mirrors opposite windows to double the natural light.
The highest-impact DIY projects include a gallery wall from thrift store frames (15-40 €), painted furniture with chalk paint (10-25 €), and open shelving from hardware store planks (15-40 €). Upcycled wooden crates become wall-mounted shelves or bedside tables for under 15 €. Nature finds — branches, dried flowers, collected stones — cost nothing and add warmth.
With Homeify, photograph any room and instantly see it transformed into 80+ design styles — from Scandinavian to japandi to bohemian. Compare your current space with the redesigned version side by side in under 30 seconds, so every euro goes toward a result you already love.
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