Nate Berkus Is ‘Famously Anti-Trends’ – Still, This Is the One Style Catching His Eye in 2026

Organic materials, earthy colorways, and owned objets are already guiding his design goals – and may well inspire yours

Nate Berkus poses alongside his Rugs USA collaboration inside of a sunlit breakfast nook with a wooden table
(Image credit: Rugs USA)

‘I am famously anti-trends – I think they are designed to make people feel bad about what they don’t have,’ Nate Berkus admits to Homes & Gardens. This is less a hot take than a long-standing policy – Nate has never been interested in what’s new; he’s interested in what survives.

Still, even the counter-trend contingent notices shifts. And if there’s something in the cultural air that’s caught his attention as we move into 2026 – not a design trend, but a sensibility – it's organics.

Architects Andrew Magnes and Chris Boskey collaborated with Nate Berkus Associates to remodel an uptown apartment with a relaxed feel for their formerly downtown clients

(Image credit: Interior Design: Nate Berkus Associates / Photography: Peter Murdock)

‘I’ve never believed that timelessness means standing still,’ adds the recent Foundations author. ‘It means paying attention. What’s feeling exciting to me right now isn’t a single trend, but a shift in sensibility.’

Which suggests that the defining sensibility of 2026 may actually be an old one – or at least something we perceive as such. For Nate, that return to story and substance starts the same way his designs always do: with feeling.

‘Ask yourself how you want a room to feel when someone enters,’ he advises. From there, source ‘things made by hand, old things that have patina and tell a story.’

That process can start small and ideally, close to home – at an antiques mall, a vintage shop, a thrift store. Simply, Nate says, ‘see where your eye lands and what sparks interest.’

Nate Berkus and Jeremiah Brent's marble kitchen

(Image credit: Kelly Marshall/Nate Berkus and Jeremiah Brent)

Of course, if something is coming back in, something else is on its way out. And topping Nate’s 2026 no-go list of dated trends is the opposite of all this: anything overly contrived.

‘Rooms that aren’t personal, that are designed to photograph well but don’t reflect the people who live there,’ are what he’s avoiding – always, to be fair, but especially now.

Nate Berkus posing in a classic entryway that features an evergreen plaid area rug and natural wood plinth

(Image credit: Rugs USA)

Nate's 2026 brief, then, isn’t actually to buy so much as to discover. Start with feeling. Let things age. Go au natural. Make it yours. ‘The best interiors I have seen are ones where people took risks,’ he muses.

Ahead, a line up of pre-patinated, organically interesting pieces we’re confident he’d love – now, in 2026, and long after the next ‘trend’ has come and gone.


Now in 2026, we couldn’t not ask Nate about the color conversation that managed to dominate the year before it officially began: Cloud Dancer. Is it an in, or an out? And can a white – of all things – carry the kind of narrative weight his work is built on?

‘I like that Pantone selected a neutral for a change, and a white at that, it’s interesting,’ Nate Berkus says, adding, ‘there are a lot of nuances with white, and they can really change a room depending on how they layer and work with the light.’

His take echoes the growing consensus that this non-color-color is ultimately about clearing space, swiping the TikTok scribble-scrabble slates clean. ‘At the end of the day, there’s a lot of noise out there,’ he says. Cloud Dancer – like anything old and decidedly not du jour – cuts through the clutter.

Julia Demer
Style Editor

Julia Demer is a New York–based Style Editor at Homes & Gardens with a sharp eye for where fashion meets interiors. Having cut her teeth at L’Officiel USA and The Row before pivoting into homes, she believes great style is universal – whether it’s a perfect outfit, a stunning room, or the ultimate set of sheets. Passionate about art, travel, and pop culture, Julia brings a global, insider perspective to every story.