Make your entryway a stylish spot in your home.
If we were being technical, we'd define a mudroom as a small space to remove dirty shoes. If we're being honest, we'd say it's an unorganized, unstylish pass-through, filled with a mishmash of shoes, coats, backpacks, and whatever random items land there. Let's change that. With these beautiful mudroom ideas, you can make your cluttered entryway one of the most well-designed places in your home. We'll help you maximize storage with clever features like flip-top benches, cabinets, cubbies, and even storage for Fido, while injecting personality into a typically bland space. Whether your style is modern, rustic, or somewhere in-between, you'll find something to obsess over. Plastic Cabinet Storage
You could go with the mudroom-standard beige square tile. Or you could splurge on vintage-inspired tile to add instant character, color, and pattern, without the pesky clean-up an accent rug requires. When designer Ellen Kavanaugh converted her laundry room to a mudroom, she chose classic hexagon tile and brightened the walls with easy-to-clean satin paint in Benjamin Moore's Garden Cucumber. Floral wallpaper by Rebecca Atwood—appropriately named Blooms in Soft Green—echoes the small scale of the tile and picks up the wall color.
No one would claim a mudroom is a glamorous place. But there's no reason you can't make it one! Adding graphic wallpaper, a chandelier, and a bold paint color will make your mudroom one of the most stylish spaces in your home, as in this Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, home, designed by Sidney Wagner. That's not to say it's all play and no practicality: Each child has a designated hook and cubby, keeping this mudroom organized and efficient.
For those times when you just can't tug off your boots while standing, you need a cushioned bench to plop down on. If this seems too single-purpose, consider the storage options underneath: Cubbies, drawers, or a flip-top inner compartment make having a place to sit down a mere bonus. For our 2018 Idea House in Austin, Texas, designer Meredith Ellis painted the walls and cabinets in Sherwin-Williams' Cyberspace, creating a streamlined look that doesn't seem cluttered, even with the hats and bags hanging on hooks.
Per their name, mudrooms require durable floors to withstand the water, dirt, and who knows what else that are tracked in on shoes and coats. In our 2015 Idea House in Charlottesville, Virginia, decorator Bunny Williams carved out a space for essential outdoor wear to live. With a dedicated spot for your muddy stuff, the rest of your home can stay clean between vacuum days. Add wall hooks for grab-and-go items, like coats, scarves, and hats.
Clean lines, soothing colors—and oversized black-and-white tile? Classic white flooring would have blended seamlessly into this ethereal space, but the bold choice of tile awes the instant you step into this mudroom. Gold hardware carries the glamorous vibes from floor to ceiling, while a muted rug softens the contrast of the tile. Recreate the cabinetry's calming hue with Farrow and Ball Pigeon.
When you have a busy schedule and full house, space is an important factor when thinking about a home layout. In this room from Jennie Holland of J Holland Interiors, it functions as a laundry room, a mudroom, and a pet area. Even with the multiple purposes, there is a clear aesthetic that keeps it looking clean and professional.
Would you dare paint your kitchen cabinets this mint-green hue? Didn't think so. Consider painting your mudroom cabinetry a color you'd deem too risky in other parts of your home. In this mudroom-slash-laundry-room, the designer started with Benjamin Moore's Spruce Green, then let the happy hue dictate other design choices, like the checkerboard porcelain tile and floral wallpaper. Matching your windowframes and trim to the cabinet color creates a jewel-box vibe that might just entice you to fold that last load of laundry.
At one end of the mudroom in our 2019 Idea House, chalkboard paint on the built-in hutch creates a spot for a family calendar, notes to guests, or weather updates. (This feature works equally well on a blank wall.) The walls and trim are painted in Sherwin-Williams' Classic Light Buff, while the rest of the hutch is in Grecian Ivory. The painted border on the floor incorporates both colors for an extra-custom touch.
If your dog habitually waits by the door for the kids to come home from school, make it a comfortable hang-out spot. Add a nook in your mudroom to house a dog bed, along with the requisite food and water bowls. For our 2021 Idea House in Louisville, Kentucky, designer Sarah Bartholomew envisioned the mudroom as the ideal place for a dog to rest, with all of the canine essentials stored neatly in overhead cabinets.
The exterior of a house is just as important as the interior, and finding a way for the two to mesh makes for a nice, cohesive feel to your home. A great way to incorporate this is through the mudroom—this one is inside of a lake house. California designer Raili Clasen moved to Lake Martin in Alabama and wanted to feel like she was truly living lakeside. The elements from the exterior of the home and the environment outside are brought in to make a stylish and connected look.
Who says mudrooms can't incorporate your personality? In this Lexington, Kentucky, farmhouse, designer Matthew Carter swapped hooks for antlers to match the rustic feel of the Pennsylvania bluestone floors (and the homeowner's lifestyle). With a dresser in lieu of cabinets, this mudroom could pass for a foyer; you can borrow the look by furnishing your space with a vintage or thrift-store find. It's an easy alternative to expensive cabinetry.
Designer Lindsey Cheek wasn't intimidated by tight quarters when she renovated her colonial home in Wilmington, North Carolina. The side door of their home opens to a multifunctional space: It's a mudroom and a home office all at once. A metal clothes rack stands in for a built-in hook-and-cubby system, while feminine details—gold touches, pink wallpaper, potted plants—signal that this space isn't strictly utilitarian. If your mudroom serves double-duty as an office, use design elements to connect the disparate parts of the room. In this case, the metal desk chair echoes the lines of the clothing rack, and the throughline of blue and pale pink creates gorgeous continuity.
Although mudrooms are often overlooked as pass-through spaces, they deserve wall art as much as the rest of your home. Vintage-inspired touches, like the framed dog prints by Lauren Liess for One Kings Lane in our 2020 Idea House, can make a functional room feel more inviting and personalized, especially with the dog leash hanging on a hook nearby. We took our style cues from the space's paneled cabinetry, which has a warm faux leather finish, lending a masculine vibe that the artwork reinforces. If you don't have dogs, consider hanging vintage-style silhouettes of your children.
If your mudroom is dominated by a washer and dryer (or in this case, two of each), why not let the machines set the color palette? This black-and-white laundry/mudroom combo is hardly boring with its patterned wallpaper and matching Roman shade; the ivory cabinetry softens the scheme so the space doesn't appear stark. Make it clear that yours is no ordinary mudroom with a statement light fixture, which emphasizes high ceilings and adds instant style.
Extra seating is always a bonus in any house, so why not add some right as you walk in? This mudroom has a built in countertop with an opening for a stool. Whether you use it to take your boots off or even as a miniature office, you can't go wrong with added storage and places to sit.
For smaller homes, it makes sense to merge the laundry room with the mudroom. If you're worried your clean clothes will mingle too closely with filthy shoes, decorator Fran Keenan proves that a small space doesn't have to limit functionality. In her Birmingham home, she transformed the hallway alongside her kitchen into a combined mudroom, laundry room, and bar. Take a cue from her creative use of space: Hide your washer and dryer behind a fun curtain, install a prep sink that can double as a hand-washing station, and designate cabinets for those household items that never seem to find a home.
In this Charlottesville, Virginia home, the mudroom has a clear view into the kitchen, where a geometric backsplash screams, "Look at me!" Rather than competing with the heart of the home, this hallway-like space plays off the kitchen's black-and-white scheme with graphic wallpaper by Marthe Armitage in London. If your mudroom isn't totally enclosed, allow the surrounding rooms to influence your design scheme—though you can still look for opportunities to make the space its own. In this case, the globe light fixture helps define the benched area.
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