Real Estate

HGTV is steering homeowners into boring home décor: study

There may be no place like home, but recent design trends — and ones that appear frequently in print and on screen — have made many homes look very much alike. 

The wide world of home-improvement media — from magazines like Better Homes and Gardens to buzzy HGTV shows like “Fixer Upper” — may seem harmless, but new research has found the influence is so great that homeowners are decorating in accordance with their mass-appeal sensibilities.

And, ultimat𒁃ely, it’s making people very sad.&n🦩bsp;

“They’re seeing everything that’s wrong with their home and imagining when people come into their home [that] they’re also criticizing and scrutinizing and judging their home,” explained Smith School of Business associate professor of marketinᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚg Annettꦛa Grant, who co-authored on the phenomenon, in an interview with .

But prioritizing the perceived preferences of the general public over personal déco🃏r desires, it turns out, is a formula for anxiety, detachment and feeling out of place in a place meant to be yours. 

“It really makes people feel quite uneasy about the decisions that they make in thei✅r♔ home, and so they’re always kind of fearful about getting it wrong,” Grant added.

hgtv study conform
A couple contemplates their home renovation through the lens of what others want in a house. Getty Images/Westend61

Yet, the takeaway message from hit renovation shows seems clear: Unique, cluttered and unconventional spaces have less mass appeal an🍌d a lower resale value, so consider the next homeowner first when making renovations. 

(HGTV did not return The Post’s request for comment.)

Of the 17 individuals who were involved in the study’s research, the majority said they wanted to b🦩e seen as a “smart homeowner who has invested in my home” and avoid distinct, potentially polarizing design cho♐ices, Grant said.

hgtv study conform
The couch need not have personality, only mass appeal. Getty Images

One individual to♑ld the study authors she believed the reason she’d gotten so much positive feedback on her renovated bathroom was because it ♒looked “like a hotel.”

In another era🅰, or to a less-conformist homeowner, this would certainly have been taken as something of a diss, a comment on the bathroom’s generic sameness.

In a world that apparently believes standardization is superꦯior, though, it’s now a compliment.