What to Ask a New Interior Design Client Before the Project Begins

Many interior design projects that encounter issues don’t necessarily go wrong at the design stage. They go wrong at the consultation stage, and that’s if a proper one was carried out in the first place.

The first consultation session is crucial and lays the foundation for a successful project implementation. There must be no assumptions; no “I thought you said this, or I felt you meant that”. Every bit of information given must be noted down, clearly and accurately. That’s the professional way to do things as an interior designer. If nobody writes anything down, chaos is looming. Weeks later, someone is disappointed, and neither party will agree on what was originally discussed.

To avoid confusion or conflict, the fix is straightforward. Before you sketch an idea or suggest a single finish, you must ask the right questions, in the right order, and record every answer the client gives.

And here is what that conversation should cover:

Quick sketches like these can be made during the consultation session.

The Budget


It’s best to ask for real numbers, and not just wide ranges. Most clients will give you a range when you ask about the budget. Push gently for a working number. A client who says "between $10,000 and $30,000" is not being evasive. He or she may genuinely not know yet. But as a professional, your job is to help them land on a realistic figure based on what they want to achieve.

Ask what they have already spent on similar projects. Ask what they would be comfortable spending if everything went exactly as they hoped. The answer to the second question is usually closer to the truth. Record the agreed working budget clearly, along with any phasing plans if the client intends to spread the work across stages.

This number will become the boundary of every decision that follows.

The Room/Space: Conditions and Constraints


Before any design talk, you need to know exactly what you are working with. Room dimensions, ceiling heights, window positions, door swings, existing built-in elements that cannot move, natural light direction, and any structural constraints.

Ask the client whether there are any landlord restrictions if it’s a rented property. Ask about any recent work done to the space that might affect your plans, perhaps new wiring, plumbing, or a wall that was removed (or added).

Most clients often forget to mention constraints until they become a problem, so asking directly at the brief stage brings them up early.

The Preferred Style


This conversation is about what they love and what they can’t stand. Unfortunately, this is where many interior designers spend too little time.

In interior design, style preferences are not just about aesthetics. They reflect how a client lives. Ask what words they would use to describe their ideal space, or show images they have saved on their phone or on Pinterest boards. These are much more honest than just verbal descriptions.

Ask what they like or dislike about their current space and what they would remove immediately, if they could. It is very important to ask what they actively dislike. A client who hates patterns but cannot articulate it will approve a design and then feel uneasy about it for months. So, getting the dislikes on record protects both of you.

An interior design brief should reflect real life, not an aspirational version of it.

The Household


How will the space be used? A beautifully designed living room that cannot survive a household with three children, two dogs and a cat, is a failed design, no matter how good it looks. Ask who uses the space and how. Ask about pets, children, and elderly family members, whether the client entertains regularly or prefers a quieter domestic environment. Ask about hobbies that may affect the space, like a home office that doubles as a music room. It requires different acoustic and storage needs than a standard workspace.

The Timeline


Is there a hard deadline, like a house move, a family event, or a lease end date? You need to know who else is involved in making decisions. In couples and families, design sign-off rarely sits well with one person, so knowing early that three people need to approve the final scheme saves you from presenting things to the wrong audience.

You want to know how quickly the client typically makes decisions. While some clients are decisive and move fast, others take their time. Neither is a problem, as long as you know which one you are working with before the project starts.


The Brief Must Always Be in Writing


Everything covered in that first consultation needs to be recorded and not summarised from memory later the same evening. The answers and notes should be written during the meeting and must be detailed enough to be referred back to at any point in the project.

A client who changes direction mid-project and claims they always wanted something different cannot do so credibly if the original brief is documented clearly.

It is not about distrust but about professionalism. A written brief protects the client as much as it protects you. It ensures that what they asked for in week one is still what you are delivering (to them) in week eight.

The Tool That Makes This System Possible


Keeping a structured record of every client consultation used to mean creating your own forms from scratch or relying on general-purpose notebooks that were never quite right for the job.

The Interior Design Client Onboarding Workbook for 24 Clients is built specifically for this process. It gives you dedicated space to record every project brief, budget figure, style preference, and consultation detail for up to 24 clients, in one organised workbook.

Every field is there because a working designer needs it. And if you are serious about running a professional interior design practice, a structured onboarding system is not optional. It is the foundation on which everything else is built.



Not sure what kind of project your client really needs? Let them take the free quiz here.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.