If you’ve been scrolling through home content lately, you’ve probably noticed something: the big corner sofa is slowly losing its grip on the living room. From Beverly Hills mansions to Brooklyn lofts, a new favourite is taking over: the statement armchair. And it’s not just a home design thing anymore. When Hailey Bieber revealed the interiors of the Rhode office in Beverly Hills, the detail that caught everyone’s eye wasn’t the skincare products on the shelves; it was the lounge area: a set of low, curved brown armchairs that felt deliberately chosen, the kind of piece you don’t stumble upon at a furniture chain.
Those chairs, warm and very similar to the Dudet armchair by Patricia Urquiola for Cassina, are a perfect snapshot of where celebrity taste is right now. Fewer pieces, better choices, and a clear preference for furniture that carries some cultural weight. It’s a shift that’s showing up everywhere, from A-list home tours to the most-saved posts on interior design feeds across the US.
Why the Armchair Is Having Its Moment
The timing isn’t accidental. After years of open-plan everything, people are craving spaces within the home that feel genuinely personal, and a single armchair does something a shared sofa simply can’t. It gives you a spot that’s entirely yours. Emma Chamberlain put it well when she launched her 2026 West Elm collection: “every seat should ask you to stay awhile.” That’s the philosophy driving the shift. Not furniture as backdrop, but furniture as intention. Her own LA home, toured twice by Architectural Digest, is full of carefully chosen armchairs that punctuate each room rather than fill it.
Cole Sprouse took a similar approach when he bought his Hollywood Hills West home, a 1949 midcentury post-and-beam with original contributions by architect Richard Neutra. The interiors lean into the bones of the house: clean lines, considered proportions, and seating that earns its place in the room rather than defaulting to the largest sofa available.
The Shapes People Are Actually Buying
Right now, interest is split between two clear camps. On one side, structured and architectural silhouettes: clean lines, firm backs, a quietly confident feel that works as well beside a fireplace as it does in a home office. On the other, organic and enveloping shapes designed to make you disappear for an hour with your phone or a book. Kendall Jenner’s recently revealed mountain home sits firmly in that second camp: layered, warm, with armchairs that look like they were chosen one by one rather than ordered as a set.
Both directions share the same underlying shift: a deliberate move away from the disposable. Buyers are researching materials, asking about frame construction, and thinking about how a piece will wear over a decade of daily use. The armchair has become the one category where people feel genuinely confident spending more, because it’s one considered object, not an entire suite.
What This Says About How We Want to Live
The broader picture is a change in how people approach a whole room. Rather than anchoring a space with a large sofa and filling outward, more homeowners, celebrity or otherwise, are starting with one strong, identity-driven piece and letting everything else play second. The chair becomes the punctuation mark of the room. The thing that tells you, quietly, who lives there.
It also changes the economics of furnishing. A well-chosen piece from a serious maker holds its value in a way flat-pack alternatives never will. As more people start treating furniture as a long-term investment rather than a seasonal fix, the armchair is only going to keep climbing.

