Affordable Design Ideas from the HGTV Dream Home 2026
The HGTV Dream Home is always packed with pinch-me moments: the views, the finishes, the furniture budget most of us don’t get to have in real life. 😅
When Robert and I visited the Dream Home for an event recently on Lake Wylie in Charlotte, I made it my mission to look past the big-ticket wow factor and hunt for smart, budget-friendly decorating tricks that anyone could replicate at home. There were so many good ones!

It was a cloudy, rainy day when we visited, so my photos aren’t the best quality, but the inspiration is definitely still there.
Here are three affordable design ideas from the HGTV Dream Home 2026 that prove great style isn’t always about spending more, it’s about thinking creatively. (By the way, you can enter to win the house here.)

1. Painter’s tape can do some amazing things
One of my favorite details in the home was the coffee bar wall. Instead of leaving the wall a basic neutral, the lead designer, Brian Patrick Flynn, used painter’s tape to define a section around the wall shelves and painted it the same teal color as the cabinets.

Why does this make a difference?
- The space feels intentional and elevated
- The crisp lines mimick the look of custom trim or molding (without the cost)
- The whole nook feels “designed,” not accidental
It was such a good reminder that paint + painter’s tape can create architectural interest without actually adding architecture.
This trick works beautifully for:
- Coffee bars
- Built-in shelves
- Desk nooks
- Mudroom drop zones
If you’re craving detail but not ready to commit to real trimwork, this is an amazing in-between solution. (We did a similar color-blocking trick to mimic the look of board & batten in this nursery years ago.)
Related: 24 Free Home Makeover Ideas Using What You Already Have
2. Objects as wall décor
This house leaned hard into objects as art, and I loved it. Instead of traditional wall décor everywhere, they showcased collections of items. It made the home feel personal, layered, curated, and very on-theme for a lake house.

A few standouts:
- A full gallery wall of vintage fishing baskets in the pantry
- Fishing reels displayed in a shadowbox in a bedroom
- Vintage style life preserver vests framed on a bathroom wall


What I loved most is that these weren’t precious, untouchable rooms. Even hardworking spaces got personality.
If you’re even mildly handy, you could DIY these shadowboxes by building a simple lumber frame with a plywood back.
If you collect anything… baskets, hats, tools, plates, recreational equipment, this is such a meaningful (and affordable) way to decorate your walls.
Related: 28 Creative DIY Wall Decor Ideas for Your Blank Walls

3. Contrasting trim and ceilings = instant drama
We’ve used this trick in our own house before, so seeing it in the Dream Home just reinforced how powerful it is.

In the bedrooms, the designers contrast painted:
- Doors
- Baseboards
- Shelving
- And the ceiling
…in a rich, moody color against neutral walls.
One room featured a deep burgundy trim and ceiling, and I kept thinking, “imagine this room without it.” It would’ve been nice, sure. But with that contrast? It’s unforgettable.

This is one of my favorite high-impact, low-cost upgrades because:
- You’re only buying a gallon or two of paint
- You’re accentuating what’s already there
- The payoff feels bold and custom
If you’re nervous, start small: a ceiling, a set of doors, or built-in shelves. Paint is forgiving, and the drama is worth it.
Related: 18 Painting Ideas to Transform Your Entire House with Just Paint
Of course, there were plenty of wow design elements that obviously cost big money (like the primary bedroom with gigantic skylights and the dreamy lake view). But it was refreshing to see attainable ideas mixed in everywhere.
You can take the Dream Home full virtual tour here, if you want to see the rest of it.


The Takeaway
What I loved most about the HGTV Dream Home 2026 wasn’t just the luxury, it was how many ideas translated beautifully to real homes with real budgets.
The common thread in all of these?
- Paint used creatively
- Everyday objects treated like art
Those are the kinds of tricks I’m always hunting for, and the ones that make a home feel thoughtful, layered, and lived-in without blowing the budget.
More Budget-Friendly Decorating Ideas

