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    Blog Post

    How to Make a Small Home Feel Bigger, Brighter, and Easier to Live In

    Small homes get a bad reputation they don’t always deserve. Sure, you may not have a spare room for every guest, hobby,...

    • Erin Brumleve
    • May 27th, 2026
    • 7 min read

     

    Small homes get a bad reputation they don’t always deserve.

    Sure, you may not have a spare room for every guest, hobby, holiday bin, and “I’ll deal with that later” pile. But a smaller home can also be easier to clean, easier to furnish, easier to maintain, and a lot more fun to live in when the space is set up well.

    Some of the best homes aren’t the biggest ones. They’re the ones where every corner has a purpose. A 650-square-foot apartment with a sunny breakfast nook. A little cottage kitchen where everything you use daily is within reach. A condo living room that handles movie nights, work-from-home days, takeout with friends, and Sunday naps without feeling overcrowded.

    When a smaller home feels good, it’s usually because a few smart decisions are doing a lot of heavy lifting.

    Why Your Small Room Feels Cramped

    In a small room, the furniture is usually the first reason why a space feels too cramped.

    A sofa with thick arms might technically fit, but if you have to turn sideways to walk around it, the room is going to feel tight every day. A dining table for six sounds great until the chairs are constantly bumping into the wall. A dresser that worked perfectly in your last bedroom might make your current one feel like a storage unit with a mattress.

    Scale matters more in a small home because every inch is part of daily life.

    That doesn’t mean everything has to be tiny. Small furniture can make a room feel awkward too, especially if it looks like it was chosen out of fear. The better goal is furniture that fits the room and the way you use it.

    Another tip: One of the most common small-space mistakes is pushing every piece of furniture against the walls. It feels logical, like you’re opening up the middle of the room, but it can make the space feel more like a waiting room than a home.

    Pulling furniture slightly away from the wall, even just a few inches, can make the layout feel more intentional. The room feels like a place to live, not just a place where furniture has been squeezed in.

    Best Furniture Ideas for Small Spaces

    Small homes make you choose better. There’s less room for furniture that’s only “fine.” Every piece has to earn its place, and the best pieces usually do more than one job.

    Some great examples of multifunctional furniture include an ottoman with storage that can hold blankets, games, or the random things you want nearby, but don’t want staring at you from the coffee table. Or, a bed with drawers underneath that can replace a dresser. You could also consider a narrow console behind the sofa that doubles as a work spot, a drop zone, a bar setup, or the place for all those odds and ends you tend to lose.

    The best small-space furniture usually has a lighter visual feel. Sofas, chairs, benches, and tables with visible legs help you see the floor, which makes the room feel more open. 

    Clear materials can help too. A glass coffee table, acrylic chair, or light-colored side table takes up physical space, but it doesn’t feel as bulky to the eye. That can make a big difference in a living room, breakfast area, or small office corner.

    How to Make a Small Home Feel Bigger with Light, Curtains, and Mirrors

    Light does a lot of work in a small home.

    Windows are usually the fastest place to start. Curtains that stop at the windowsill make the wall feel shorter, and heavy dark panels can close a room in, especially when they're blocking natural light.

    Hang the rod as close to the ceiling as the room allows and let the curtains reach the floor. Both moves make the wall read taller and the room feel more finished. For fabric color, staying close to the wall color keeps the look soft..

    Mirrors are another small-home classic for a reason. A large mirror across from a window can bounce light around the room. A full-length mirror in a bedroom can make the space feel deeper. A mirror in an entryway can make the first few steps into the home feel more open.

    Lighting after dark is its own problem. One overhead source rarely does a small room any favors. It flattens everything out, which is the last thing you want in the evening when the goal is warmth, not fluorescence.

    The fix is layering. A floor lamp in one corner, a table lamp near the sofa, a small lamp on a console, sconces if the walls allow it. Multiple light sources at different heights make a room feel lived in rather than lit up. That's the difference between a room that reads small and bright and one that actually feels good to be in at the end of the day.

    How to Declutter a Small Home Without Making It Feel Empty

    Small homes make it obvious what belongs and what's just been waiting for someone to deal with it. In a larger home, clutter spreads out and hides. In a smaller one, it collects in the places you use most like the kitchen counter, the entry table, the bedroom chair that becomes a second closet, the hall closet packed with holiday decor and old cords instead of coats.

    Start with duplicates. The kitchen is usually full of them: extra spatulas, mugs no one uses, storage containers without lids, serving pieces that came out once. Then look at anything stored in an active area that makes your day harder. If you're moving a box of seasonal stuff every time you grab a jacket, that's a problem worth solving.

    A cleared counter means you can make dinner without rearranging the room first. A coffee table with a little space on it is actually usable. A bedroom without a pile of laundry in the corner is easier to sleep in. None of that requires a smaller home, just less stuff in it.

    Small Kitchen and Bathroom Ideas That Make Everyday Life Easier

    Kitchens and bathrooms are usually the best places to start decluttering and reorganizing because they affect your day to day so directly.

    In a small kitchen, countertop space is everything. If the counter is crowded, the whole kitchen feels harder to use. Keeping only the daily essentials out can make the space feel instantly better. That might be the coffee maker, a knife block, a fruit bowl, and the cutting board you reach for every night. Everything else can usually live in a cabinet, drawer, pantry, or storage basket nearby.

    And if you’re still struggling with counterspace, consider options like a magnetic knife strip, a wall-mounted rail for utensils, drawer organizers, and small trays near the stove for olive oil, salt, and the things you use constantly.

    Bathrooms work the same way. The fewer products sitting around the sink, the cleaner and calmer the room feels. A medicine cabinet, baskets under the vanity, hooks behind the door, and a narrow shelf can make a small bathroom feel much easier to live with.

    Benefits of Living in a Small Home

    The benefits of a smaller home go beyond saving money. There's less to clean, less to furnish, less to maintain, and fewer rooms collecting things you never use.

    Daily life tends to feel simpler too. You know what you have. You use more of your space. You're less likely to buy furniture or decor just because there's an empty room that seems to need something.

    A smaller home set up well can feel deeply personal. It asks you to be more deliberate about what you keep and how you live.

    When the layout works, the furniture fits, the light is right, and the clutter is under control, a small home can feel like exactly enough.

    Thinking about downsizing, buying your first place, or making a smaller space work better for your life? We're happy to help you figure out what actually makes sense for the way you live day to day.

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    About the author

    Erin Brumleve

    303-681-7913
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    Erin Brumleve has spent over 20 years guiding people through life transitions—first as a licensed professional counselor and art therapist, and for the past 11 years as a trusted Denver Realtor. Her career is distinguished by consistent recognition at the highest levels of the Denver Metro Association of Realtors, including Diamond Level honors from 2020 through 2024 and Diamond Status in partnership in 2020 and 2022. She is a Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist (CLHMS). Erin holds a Master’s degree in Counseling and a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Art (Painting), bringing a rare blend of strategic insight, emotional intelligence, and aesthetic expertise to her work. A Colorado resident of 19 years, she is constantly studying local market trends, architecture, and neighborhood nuance. Known for her concierge-level service and strategic negotiation skills, Erin is passionate about giving back and has held leadership and volunteer roles both within her company and within the community. She currently serves on her neighborhood’s HOA Board in Greenwood Village. Outside of work, Erin finds joy in her daily run or ride, a semi-consistent yoga practice, and soaking up art, design, and foodie culture. And of course spending time with her two cat babies—Lucy and Lloyd. “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.” – Will Durant, The Story of Philosophy (1926)

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