(June 18, 2025 – Washington, D.C.) –– The American Society of Interior Designers (ASID) has released its 2025 Economic Outlook report, offering a strategic analysis of how today’s uncertain economic environment is reshaping demand for interior design services. Despite moderate growth in consumer spending and employment, the report offers an uneven growth forecast, driven by high interest rates, rising material costs, and widespread tariffs. Labor shortages, paused infrastructure funding, and high housing prices add further complexity, underscoring the need for designers to stay agile, cost-conscious, and attuned to new areas of opportunity—from adaptive reuse projects to aging-in-place design solutions.
“As the economic landscape evolves, it presents new opportunities for the interior design industry to innovate, diversify and grow,” said Khoi Vo, chief executive officer, ASID. “Through this extensive research, ASID is proud to provide designers with insights that help them adapt strategically, embrace change, and identify new opportunities for growth.”
Authored by economist Bernard Markstein, Ph.D. and ASID Research Fellow S. Dawn Haynie, Ph.D., with contributions by ASID Director of Communications Lindsey Koren, the report is the second installment in ASID’s three-part Outlook research series, sponsored by Sherwin-Williams. It delivers actionable data, trend analysis, and sector-specific forecasts to support long-term planning and strategic decision-making across the design industry.
New additions to this year’s report include:
Key insights from the report explore the economic impact on employment, trade, recession, hospitality, the workplace and more:
The 2025 report also includes sector-specific outlooks for education, entertainment, multifamily housing, senior housing, and home improvements. While the baseline forecast avoids a full recession, the probability of slower growth remains high, with tariff-driven inflation, labor costs, and interest rates weighing on construction activity and capital investment.
The full report is available for free to ASID members and offered for purchase to all others at $150 at www.asid.org.