What’s Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week 2026?

From regional talents to the global icons you need to know, we’ve curated the definitive shortlist of this year’s Milan Design Week and there’s something here for every aesthetic. These highlights are guaranteed to inspire a total home metamorphosis. Consider yourself warned
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week
Photo: Jusoor
Rare Matter by Visionnaire
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

“Each piece is conceived as a singular project — where material and structure act as one,” says Eleonore Cavalli, Co-Founder and Creative Director of Visionnaire. “Forms are sharp and architectural; volumes define space with clarity and precision.” Throughout this retro brutalist collection, the themes of nostalgia and permanence are omnipresent.

La Volupté: Unfolding at Rossana Orlandi
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Characterised by fluid, organic forms that echo the human body, this collection by Fadi Yachoui of Atelier L’Inconnu is hand-sculpted from a blend of resin and natural rattan. “In an era where artisanal skills are increasingly rare, this piece stands as a testament to the resilience of Lebanese craftsmanship,” says Yachoui. “It is a sculpture of movement, a statement of resilience, and a celebration of the timeless beauty of the handmade.”

‘The Private Lives of Objects’ by Flexform
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Two installations unveil the brand’s new indoor and outdoor collections featuring works by renowned designers Antonio Citterio, Patrick Norguet, Fumie Shibata, Sebastian Herkner and Monica Armani. More than mere objects occupying space, these furnishings are made to be witnesses to our daily rituals and repositories of memory.

Vessels of the Intangible by Richard Yasmine
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

“A lighting collection at the crossroads of design and art, it explores the invisible sensory forces that animate the body and shape perception before thought,” says the Lebanese designer. “Each piece transforms one of the five senses into a threshold of awareness.”

Poliform’s new arrivals
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Whether at its new flagship store in Piazza della Scala or within the 18th-century Palazzo Clerici, the brand introduces a collection that unfolds across every area of the home. The new pieces feature a stellar lineup of collaborators, including Jean-Marie Massaud and Emmanuel Gallina, Yabu Pushelberg, and Studioutte.

Li Beirut: Between Shadow and Light
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

“I wanted to create more than an installation,” explains Mark Farhat Giusti, who collaborated with Lebanese creatives, Youssef El Hady and Rami Lazkany. “I wanted to create an immersive atmosphere. A feeling. A space that invites people not only to look, but to feel. A contemporary reinterpretation of a traditional Beirut living room, shaped by memory, emotion, material, scent, light, and design.”

Cosentino with Tom Dixon
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Exploring the intersection of material innovation, structural expression, and sensory experience, this immersive installation — conceived with the British designer — presents the new AXIS table in collaboration with ACTIU and the new Dekton® Artik Nodes collection. The showcase also debuts ĒCLOS®, Cosentino’s latest mineral surface built with INLAYR® technology.

Urjowan Alsharif Interiors at L’Appartamento by Artemest
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Dedicated to the theme of Italian Grandeur, this year’s exhibition features five design studios, including Urjowan Alsharif Interiors. The Saudi interior architect envisioned ‘The Alcove’ as a contemporary Florentine sanctuary rooted in art, traditional craft, and the romantic atmosphere of the Tuscan countryside.

‘The Bathhouse’ by Kohler
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Reimagining a similar structure from the grounds of Flamingo Estate in Los Angeles, ‘The Bathhouse’ appears as a courtyard sanctuary in Milan celebrating design, materiality, and wellness. At its heart is the Reverie freestanding bath — a masterclass in craftsmanship with its cast iron core, hand-applied interior enamel, and exterior copper cladding.

Jusoor Design Collections Exhibition
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Taking its name from the Arabic word for bridges, ‘Jusoor’ is a programme developed by Saudi Arabia’s Architecture and Design Commission and curated by Samer Yamani. The initiative connects emerging Saudi talent to a global audience and international brands.

Dimorestudio
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Emiliano Salci and Britt Moran, the duo behind the coveted Milan-based architecture and interior design firm, have just inaugurated the new headquarters of Dimoregallery, located steps from Piazza Affari. For the 2026 edition of Design Week, Dimorestudio has also partnered with Bonacina to create the Punta Ala collection — a Tuscany-inspired line.

Nilufar
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

Several Lebanese designers are showcasing their work with legendary gallerist Nina Yashar, including the acclaimed duo David/Nicolas. For his Cactus collection, Georges Mohasseb drew inspiration from the desert to create a series of tables and consoles characterised by column-like vertical structures.

Kelly Wearstler and H&M HOME
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

The L.A. design star unveils her first collaboration with the brand, marking a highly anticipated Milan Design Week debut. Two concepts drive the collection: daily rituals and modular synergy. “Modularity is freedom,” says Wearstler. “A space is never fixed; it continues to evolve.”

Metamorphosis in Motion by Lina Ghotmeh
Whats Next in Furniture and Interiors According to Milan Design Week

An eye-catching, playful pink labyrinth of curved shapes and rising volumes invites visitors to slow down in the courtyard of Palazzo Litta. This immersive installation marks the first site-specific solo outdoor work in Italy by the Lebanese-born architect.