If your home still feels heavy, dark, or stuck in winter, you’re not alone. Every year around this time, I start craving a shift, but not a full redesign. The good news? You don’t need one. Learning how to refresh your home for spring is less about buying all new decor and more about making a few thoughtful changes that completely transform how your space feels.
This is exactly what I do in my own home each season, and today I’m walking you through it, room by room.
Why Your Home Still Feels Like Winter
Even when the seasons change outside, our homes don’t automatically follow. Winter tends to linger indoors through heavier textures, deeper tones, and a general sense of visual weight that we stop noticing after a while.

If your home feels a little darker than you’d like, slightly heavy, or just not quite right, it’s rarely the entire room. More often, it’s a handful of elements that are still holding onto that winter feeling. The goal isn’t to strip everything back, but to gently shift the atmosphere so your home starts to feel aligned with the season again.
How to Refresh Your Home for Spring (Room by Room)
Living Room: Add Something Light and Organic
One of the simplest ways to refresh your home for spring is to bring in something organic. A vase of tulips, branches, or even grocery store flowers can instantly soften a space and introduce a sense of movement that wasn’t there before.
It doesn’t need to be elaborate. Even one small arrangement on a coffee table or side table can signal that seasonal shift and make the entire room feel more awake.

Shop: Tulips | Glass Vase | Coffee Table | Curtains | Peacock Fireplace Fan
This is also a natural place to incorporate pieces you already own in a new way, or to introduce a simple glass vase that lets the stems and water become part of the visual moment. If you need some ideas for faux stems you can find my favorites here!
Office: Swap Your Scent
This is one of the most overlooked ways to change how a space feels. Scent has a quiet but powerful influence, and switching from warm, woodsy winter candles to something lighter and fresher can completely shift the mood of a room.
In my own home, this is often the first change I make, especially in a space like my home office where I’m spending most of my time. A clean, citrusy or floral candle immediately makes a space feel brighter, even if nothing else has changed visually. It’s a small detail, but it has a disproportionate impact. Need some fresh ideas? I’m currently burning this Holy Rosewater & Basil candle which is so perfect for spring, and I’ve rounded up more of my favorite candles here!

Shop: Holy Rosewater & Basil Candle | Brass Tray | Candle Snuffer | Mirror | Wallpaper | Dresser | Lamp (similar)
Kitchen: Style Something You Actually Use
Refreshing your home for spring doesn’t mean adding more decorative objects. In the kitchen especially, it often means using what you already have in a more intentional way.
A simple bowl of lemons or oranges on the counter adds color, life, and a sense of effortlessness that feels perfectly in season. It’s functional, it’s beautiful, and it doesn’t require buying something purely for display.
These are the kinds of shifts that make a home feel lived-in rather than styled.

Shop: Light Fixture | Brass Lamp | Marble Canister | Wooden Spoons | Brass Olive Oil Cruet | Cabinet Color | Drawer Pulls
Bedroom: Lighten One Layer
You don’t need to completely change your bedding to make your bedroom feel like spring. In fact, the most effective approach is usually the simplest one.
Removing one heavy layer, swapping in a lighter bed blanket, or changing out pillow covers can make the entire room feel fresher without disrupting the overall design. It’s about creating a sense of ease, not starting from scratch.


Shop: Bed | Duvet Set | White Bed Blanket | Sheets | Mattress | Lampshades | Lamps | Paint Color | Chandelier
This is one of those changes that you feel immediately, even if it’s subtle visually.
Powder Room: Add Something Unnecessary and Beautiful
Small spaces are where you can lean into beauty a little more freely. A powder room is the perfect place to add something that serves no purpose other than making you smile.
Fresh flowers, a sculptural vase, a pretty hand towel, or a small tray can elevate the entire space in seconds. These details might seem minor, but they’re often what make a home feel layered, personal, and complete.

Shop: Wallpaper | Peonies | Silver Vase | Glass Tray | Toilet | Walnut Toilet Seat Cover | Hand Towel | Mirror
You Don’t Need to Redecorate for Spring
This is the part I come back to every year. Refreshing your home isn’t about replacing everything—it’s about shifting the feeling.
If you’re wondering how to refresh your home for spring, the answer is almost always smaller than you think. Start with one surface, one room, or one change. Let that be enough.
Those small shifts build on each other, and before you know it, your entire home feels different.
Shop the Details
If you’re looking for a handful of fresh pieces to rotate into your home, I’ve linked some simple options here so you can recreate the same feeling in your own home. From simple florals to fresh spring candles and everyday elevated kitchen styling pieces, these are the items I reach for year after year.

Shop: Wallpaper | Bubble Chandelier | Draperies | Crystal Candlesticks | Elevated Marble Bowl | Rug
Closing Thought on How to Refresh Your Home for Spring
Refreshing your home for spring doesn’t require a full reset. It’s usually just a few small, thoughtful changes that bring everything back to life.
And in my experience, those are the changes that last.
Related Posts You May Love
If you’re drawn to this layered, lived-in approach, you might also enjoy a few of my other posts where I go deeper into styling and sourcing.
I share more about how I approach bookshelf styling in a way that feels collected rather than cluttered, as well as my favorite vintage finds that bring character into a home. If you’re just getting started with DIY, I also have a guide to beginner-friendly projects that make a real impact without feeling overwhelming.
Beginner Friendly (and Renter Friendly) Easy DIY Projects





























































































































