Mobile Home Decorating Trends for 2025

Home decor styles have been rather boring over the last few years. White subway tile, white walls, white furniture, and neutral colors from floor to ceiling have been so popular for so long that there seems to be a bit of a revolt happening in the home design world and these mobile home decorating trends for 2025 sorta prove it.

The days of boring color pallets may be a thing of the past. 2025 seems to be the year where anything goes and families are embracing color, texture, and materials that ooze character.

Popular home design brands like Home Beautiful and BHG aren’t holding back at all. Every page seems to be filled with gorgeous color and tasty trends that would have been, well, not-so-cool just a couple of years ago.

Here are some of our favorite mobile home decorating trends for 2025 that can be replicated fairly easily and doesn’t have to cost a lot:

White Beige Scandinavian Decoration Photo Collage

Savvy Scandinavian

Scandinavian decor has been a major home design trend for several years. Scandinavian furniture is known for its clean lines that pair well with most any decorating style.

If space is an issue in your mobile home you’ll want to consider using furniture that serves multiple purposes. So look for convertible bed cum sofas, coffee tables with storage, or ottomans that can double up as seating options. Such pieces of furniture not only save space but are fun and functional as well.

Cool Coastal

Light colors can make even the smallest of rooms look larger and more open because lighter hues reflect and bounce light around. When painting the walls, consider using light shades like soft whites, pastel shades, or soft grays. These colors reflect light in such a way to create an airy atmosphere that’s perfect for the cool coastal style.

To add extra pop, you can consider infusing color by way of accessories like cushions and dune rugs or mesa rugs that are cheap, soft-textured, easy to clean, and made sustainably to make the home look cheery and vibrant.

Related: This is park model is one of my favorite featured homes with a cool coastal style.

beach theme decor-park model interior
Wicker furniture screams coastal living.

Cottagecore

Wikipedia defines Cottagecore as:

Cottagecore centers on traditional, rural, or pioneer aesthetics, through clothing, interior design, and crafts. Cottagecore is related to similar aesthetic movements such as grandmacore, goblincore, gnomecore, and fairycore.

Basically, it’s your grandmother’s house if she lived beside a pond in a thick forest and went by the name Snow White in her younger years. Think natural fibers and textures that add dimension and depth like plush braid rugs, woven baskets, soft wool blankets, and throw pillows for added comfort.

Related: This gorgeous mobile home is a perfect example of cottagecore.

Since cottages tend to be tucked away in the woods they’d be a perfect place to read your favorite book. Tall bookcases filled with great literature can give a spacious feel and let you display decorative items that liven up a room. You can use books, pretty dishes, or even plants to adorn the shelves for a more personal effect. Wicker baskets and knick knacks on taller bookcases help draw the eye upward, which in turn will make a room seem taller.

Just Be You

Add a personal touch to your mobile home with photo frames of loved ones, display travel souvenirs, or showcase those trophies or medals you worked so hard for.

Yes, designer touches are nice and it’s fun to look at beautiful spaces online and in magazines but at the end of the day it’s your home and yours alone. If you’re anything like me you get company once in a blue moon so decorate your home for you, not your company.

If it makes you smile do it. Life is way too short to be worrying about what anyone thinks.

As always, thanks for reading Mobile Home Living.

1 thought on “Mobile Home Decorating Trends for 2025”

  1. On my own, I’d have sort of montage of Scandinavian (yay, home team~), Shaker and early American steam bent wood dining chairs. I love to mix styles and periods, which means, yeah, I kinda like layering. 🙂 My partner and I are layering pretty much with anything goes with the only guardrails we are putting on ourselves is, for him a simple request: do not try to fool me by claiming a pile of junk is an homage to Jackson Pollack when we are talking about layering. Also, these rules only apply to the public rooms. We can decide ourselves whatever we want it to be. I expect they will be considered “normal.” I think rather than saying to the other’s ideas no, this becomes a good psychological strategy: without rules we are far too nerotic to abuse generous terms. But, back to the non-rules, we can use will look like or be from the 1900s until the 2000s and that we have a light colored ceiling, some pale yellowish paint that will blend with the nasty beige carpet. That foul wall-to-wall stuff is going to be coming in at around five grand, with me doing my labor instead of paying someone who really knows what they are doing to do it.
    But the tortured point I was trying to make was, when we take a blank house and make it a living, breathing home, we have done our job. I didn’t understand it at the time but the old house I grew up in was older. I look at homes like I have always looked at books. The best ones have had someone reading, thinking about what the read. Perhaps those books are dogeared, notes scratched in corners.
    I want our home to be that way. The enveloping yellowish light with this unknown white-to-be-chosen-yet will be designed to hug, offer good coffee and stale pastry.
    These interiors you have chosen and information you share is very helpful. I lost track of MHL, and I’m glad to have found you kind people again. As I go through all of these plans I have rattling in my head and actually pull the trigger on one, I’d like to share it with you. Or America’s Funniest Videos. 😉

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