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Economic performance and construction activity are two major factors influencing growth for interior designers. Residential and commercial consumers are interior designers' main downstream markets, making up over 80% of their core revenue streams. While both adjust their spending on interior design based on economic conditions, the mix of residential and commercial designers balances the industry. For example, positive trends in consumer spending and the housing market have offset shakier activity in the nonresidential sphere. Rising consumer spending, which grew an annualized 3.9% over the past five years, benefited independent designers, the bulk of the profession, as homeowners spent more on interior design. Broader housing growth facilitated a wider revenue niche across residential design services, with new housing units remaining stable at 1.5 million new housing units completed from May 2024 to May 2025, per the US Census Bureau. Revenue grew at a CAGR of 4.2% to an estimated $27.2 billion over the past five years, including an estimated 0.4% boost in 2025 alone.
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IBISWorld's research coverage on the Interior Designers industry in the United States includes market sizing, forecasting, data and analysis from 2015-2030. The most recent publication was released July 2025.
The Interior Designers industry in the United States operates under the NAICS industry code 54141. This industry is made up of operators that design architectural interiors and their furnishings. Interior designers take into account building codes, health and safety regulations, traffic patterns, floor planning, electrical needs, interior fittings and furniture. These services are used by the hospitality, healthcare, commercial and residential sectors. Related terms covered in the Interior Designers industry in the United States include computer-aided design, the international code council (icc) and leadership in energy and environment design (leed).
Products and services covered in Interior Designers industry in the United States include Full-service interior design services for non-residential buildings, Full-service interior design services for residential buildings and Interior decorating services.
The Interior Designers industry in the United States is highly fragmented with no companies holding a market share greater than 5%.
The Performance chapter covers detailed analysis, datasets, detailed current performance, sources of volatility and an outlook with forecasts for the Interior Designers industry in the United States.
Questions answered in this chapter include what's driving current industry performance, what influences industry volatility, how do successful businesses overcome volatility, what's driving the industry outlook. This analysis is supported with data and statistics on industry revenues, costs, profits, businesses and employees.
The Products and Markets chapter covers detailed products and service segmentation and analysis of major markets for the for the Interior Designers industry in the United States.
Questions answered in this chapter include how are the industry's products and services performing, what are innovations in industry products and services, what products or services do successful businesses offer and what's influencing demand from the industry's markets. This includes data and statistics on industry revenues by product and service segmentation and major markets.
The Geographic Breakdown chapter covers detailed analysis and datasets on regional performance of the Interior Designers industry in the United States.
Questions answered in this chapter include where are industry businesses located and how do businesses use location to their advantage. This includes data and statistics on industry revenues by location.
The Competitive Forces chapter covers the concentration, barriers to entry and supplier and buyer profiles in the Interior Designers industry in the United States. This includes data and statistics on industry market share concentration, barriers to entry, substitute products and buyer & supplier power.
Questions answered in this chapter include what impacts the industry's market share concentration, how do successful businesses handle concentration, what challenges do potential industry entrants face, how can potential entrants overcome barriers to entry, what are substitutes for industry services, how do successful businesses compete with substitutes and what power do buyers and suppliers have over the industry and how do successful businesses manage buyer & supplier power.
The Companies chapter covers Key Takeaways, Market Share and Companies in the Interior Designers industry in the United States. This includes data and analysis on companies operating in the industry that hold a market share greater than 5%.
Questions answered in this chapter include what companies have a meaningful market share and how each company is performing.
The External Environment chapter covers Key Takeaways, External Drivers, Regulation & Policy and Assistance in the Interior Designers industry in the United States. This includes data and statistics on factors impacting industry revenue such as economic indicators, regulation, policy and assistance programs.
Questions answered in this chapter include what demographic and macroeconomic factors impact the industry, what regulations impact the industry, what assistance is available to this industry.
The Financial Benchmarks chapter covers Key Takeaways, Cost Structure, Financial Ratios, Valuation Multiples and Key Ratios in the Interior Designers industry in the United States. This includes financial data and statistics on industry performance including key cost inputs, profitability, key financial ratios and enterprise value multiples.
Questions answered in this chapter include what trends impact industry costs and how financial ratios have changed overtime.
The Industry Data chapter includes 10 years of historical data with 5 years of forecast data covering statistics like revenue, industry value add, establishments, enterprises, employment and wages in the Interior Designers industry in the United States.
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The market size of the Interior Designers industry in the United States is $27.2bn in 2026.
There are 155k businesses in the Interior Designers industry in the United States, which has grown at a CAGR of 5.2 % between 2020 and 2025.
The Interior Designers industry in the United States is unlikely to be materially impacted by import tariffs with imports accounting for a low share of industry revenue.
The Interior Designers industry in the United States is unlikely to be materially impacted by export tariffs with exports accounting for a low share of industry revenue.
The market size of the Interior Designers industry in the United States has been growing at a CAGR of 4.2 % between 2020 and 2025.
Over the next five years, the Interior Designers industry in the United States is expected to grow.
Full-service interior design for residential buildings and Full-service interior design for nonresidential buildings are part of the Interior Designers industry in the United States.
The level of competition is high and steady in the Interior Designers industry in the United States.