Renting does not mean you have to live in a space that feels like someone else’s room. With the right strategies, a rental living room can feel as personal, warm, and carefully considered as any owned home. The constraints of renting actually encourage creativity in a way that full ownership does not always require.
These living room decor ideas work within rental rules. No painting, no drilling beyond what your tenancy allows, and nothing that damages walls, floors, or fixtures. The results speak for themselves.
The Rental Living Room Cheat Sheet
Before starting, know your rights. Most tenancies allow picture hooks and small nail holes that are considered reasonable wear and tear. Many allow adhesive strips rated for pictures. Very few allow painting. Check your tenancy agreement before making any permanent changes.
Gallery Walls: The Rental’s Best Friend
A gallery wall transforms a blank rental wall into the most personal feature of the room. Use adhesive picture strips rated for the weight of your frames. Mix sizes and frame styles within a consistent colour palette for a curated rather than chaotic look. Art prints from online shops, photographs, vintage maps, and even fabric in frames all work.
Rugs to Define and Warm the Space
Rental flooring is rarely beautiful. A large rug covers what you cannot change and adds warmth underfoot and visually. Choose a rug in a pattern or texture that suits your aesthetic and is large enough to sit all furniture legs on or at minimum the front legs of the sofa.
Curtains That Are Yours to Take
Most rentals come with curtains that are either non-existent or deeply unsuitable. Replace them with your own using a tension rod that requires no drilling. Take them with you when you move. Floor-length curtains in a warm linen tone make the most significant difference to how a rental living room feels.
Plants: The Easiest Living Room Upgrade
No rental rules restrict plants. A large plant in the corner, trailing plants on shelves, and small plants on the coffee table or windowsill add life, colour, and warmth to any rental living room. Plants also add a sense of permanence and care to a space, making it feel more like home regardless of your lease terms.
Freestanding Furniture That Goes With You
Every piece of furniture you invest in for a rental should be something you would take to your next home. A quality sofa, a well-chosen rug, a bookshelf that suits multiple room sizes, a lamp you love. Invest in pieces that travel rather than things designed for one specific room.
For more renter-friendly ideas, explore our guides on small living room layout ideas that look bigger and budget home decor ideas that look high end.


