
In all of the excitement of buying your first home, furnishing it may have been forgotten. You move in and suddenly โฆ wow. Thereโs a lot more space than you had in your apartment. You need new furniture, new rugs, new lamps, new art work, new accessories โฆ and, well, new everything!
Furnishing your first home is a once in a lifetime experience that you want to both enjoy and get right, so before you run out to hit the home furniture stores, take a minute to read through this list of the four most common home furnishing mistakes that new home buyers make and how to avoid them.
Buying Everything All at Once
Many new homeowners will rush out and buy as much as they can as soon as they can to fill up the home and be โdone withโ the move. But that is a mistake. Furnishing the home all in one go usually leads to clutter, mismatches and decorating blunders. You may settle for a less-than-ideal piece simply because itโs available now.
A better approach is to take some time to plan what you want each room to look like. Get used to the way light comes in through the windows, how you naturally position yourself in the room and how you actually use the room. Yes, go out and buy things you need right away, but take your time with the other stuff. We agree with this advice from interior designer Nate Berkus: โYour home should tell the story of who you are and be a collection of what you love.โ
If you are moving from a rental, chances are you already have the basics covered, which means thereโs no urgent need for the most lived in rooms like the bedroom, bathroom or kitchen. With those immediate needs covered, you can take some time to come up with a really great plan for the more exposed living areas, which also happen to be the areas youโll want to show off.
Eyeballing It
In your excitement of finding the perfect piece, you might eyeball the size and decide itโll fit. Not a good idea. You should measure your space before you even start browsing for furniture. Youโll want to know the room dimensions (length, width and ceiling height) as well as the available space for where you plan to place the furniture. You may need to account for existing pieces that youโll have to work around, leave room for walkways or avoid windows and doors. If you plan to keep existing pieces, you may want to measure their length, width and height too so you can mix and match new pieces to achieve balance and harmony in the room. Scale is one of the most overlooked parts of home decorating, but one of the most visually impactful. Scale refers to how a piece looks in the room. It needs to fit the size of the room, visually. For example, a too-small sofa may be dwarfed by vaulted ceilings and a broad expanse of uninterrupted wall.
Also, be sure to measure doorways and hallways if youโre buying big pieces. You may have a huge great room that will look fantastic with a large sectional, but if it canโt fit through the door or the hallway, youโre going to be very frustrated.
Going Square
Itโs really common for homeowners to place furniture up against the walls of the room. This placement is boring and limiting, and it can make an open floor plan feel cavernous and cold. Donโt be afraid to get creative with your room layouts. Bring furniture in from the walls and closer together to create cozy spaces for different needs โ reading, watching TV, socializing. Depending on how itโs arranged, furniture and dรฉcor can also be used to break up a large open room or to pull two separate spaces together, like the kitchen and living area in an open concept plan, for example. Be sure to leave enough room for walkways.
Overfilling the Room
New home buyers are at an advantage here. Theyโre bringing less with them so thereโs less chance of the rooms being too crowded. Donโt give in to the temptation to cram your new home full of new stuff. You want to leave room for movement, of course, but you also want to be able to see your new home, not just the furniture inside it. A good rule of thumb is to start with the basic essentials of what you need for each room. Then stop. As Kay Wade, vice president and head designer of the Los Angeles-based interior design firm Closet Factory, explains, โDepending on the space and your budget, you can start simply and the space can grow over time.โ
Personal preference does play a role in how many furnishings are placed in a room. Some people prefer a closer feel; others are more minimalist. Definitely stick with your preferences. This is your home after all and you should love it.
Take All the Time You Need
There is no hard and fast rule about how quickly you need to get your home furnished. In fact, many interior designers say itโs perfectly acceptable to take up to a year to decorate your new home. Or if youโre of the same mind as author and designer Suzanne Kasler, you may never be finished. โOne of the hardest things to do is finish it,โ she says, โbecause youโre always finding and adding your next favorite thing.โ Thatโs okay. Your home should be a reflection of you. Just as your needs and interests can change over time, your home can too. So relax, go shopping and pull your new home together all in your own time.

Sarah Kinbar is a writer and editor with a passion for design and images. She was the editor of Garden Design magazine, curating coverage of residential gardens around the globe. As the editor of American Photo, Kinbar worked with photographers of every genre to create a magazine that told the story of the photographerโs journey.
She has been writing about architecture, landscape design and new-home construction for NewHomeSource since 2012. During that time, she founded Kinship Design Marketing, a boutique agency that provides content for website redesigns, blogs, inbound marketing campaigns and eNewsletters.