Room examples
Living Room Virtual Staging Before and After Examples
The living room is usually the most important room to stage. It sets the mood for the home and helps buyers imagine the lifestyle the listing is selling.
Why living room staging matters
The living room usually carries the emotional weight of a listing. It is where buyers decide whether the home feels open, comfortable, and worth continuing to inspect.
Good living room virtual staging should define the seating area, show realistic furniture scale, and keep sightlines to windows, doors, and adjacent rooms open. The before-and-after examples below use the same empty room so you can compare how different styles change the mood without changing the architecture.
What to check in living room examples
- Sofa placement should make circulation obvious.
- Rugs and coffee tables should establish scale without crowding the room.
- Windows, balcony doors, flooring, and wall geometry should stay intact.
Living Room Virtual Staging Before and After Examples
The living room is usually the most important room to stage. It sets the mood for the home and helps buyers imagine the lifestyle the listing is selling.
- Sofa and rug establish scale
- Sightlines remain open
- Architecture stays intact
Style gallery
Living room virtual staging style ideas
Each style uses a different Living room photo, so you can compare the look across a wider range of listing situations.
Modern
Modern living rooms are styled with clean-lined seating, a simple rug, and restrained accents so the space feels current without hiding its scale or circulation.
Scandinavian
Scandinavian living rooms are styled with pale woods, soft textiles, and comfortable seating so the space feels bright, approachable, and easy to read.
Industrial
Industrial living rooms are styled with darker accents, metal, leather, and wood while keeping the seating layout practical for the actual floor plan.
Coastal
Coastal living rooms are styled with light upholstery, natural fibers, and soft blue or sandy accents so the space feels open, relaxed, and listing-friendly.
Luxury
Luxury living rooms are styled with tailored seating, richer materials, and fewer statement pieces so the room feels premium while the architecture stays the focus.
Minimalist
Minimalist living rooms are styled with only the essential furniture buyers need to understand scale, leaving open floor area and very little decorative noise.
Mid-Century Modern
Mid-century modern living rooms are styled with warm wood, tapered legs, and compact statement seating that gives the room personality without crowding it.
Japandi
Japandi living rooms are styled with low, calm furniture, natural wood, soft texture, and negative space so the room feels warm, quiet, and intentional.
Bohemian
Bohemian living rooms are styled with woven materials, ceramics, subtle pattern, and plants while keeping the layout curated rather than cluttered.
Traditional
Traditional living rooms are styled with classic seating shapes, balanced side pieces, and warm accents so the room feels familiar, comfortable, and move-in ready.
Compare styles
Switch between 10 staging styles for the same room, including modern, luxury, Scandinavian, Japandi, industrial, and bohemian.
Review accuracy
Use the before image to confirm walls, windows, flooring, fixtures, and room layout stayed honest.
Automatic disclaimer
Add an AI-use disclaimer to each staged photo for compliance. Add your agency logo as a watermark to help prevent reuse.
Browse every room type
Use the full examples gallery to compare living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, dining rooms, offices, studio apartments, and occupied-home furniture removal side by side.





















