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How Much Does Luxury Interior Design Cost in Scottsdale

How Much Does Luxury Interior Design Cost in Scottsdale

Luxury interior design in Scottsdale costs $15,000 to $75,000 or more in design fees alone, with total project investment typically ranging from $80,000 to over $1.2 million depending on scope. In Scottsdale and Paradise Valley, where project scopes tend to run larger and finish quality expectations run higher than national norms, the honest answer is that luxury interior design fees are real and they add up quickly. This guide explains how design fees are structured, what actual project costs look like across different scopes, and where clients most often miscalculate their budgets.

First, What Are You Actually Paying For?

When you hire a luxury interior design firm in Scottsdale, the fee covers more than taste and furniture selection. A full-service engagement includes space planning, finish specification, furniture selection and custom fabrication sourcing, finish material selection for cabinetry, countertops, tile, and flooring, lighting design, procurement management, vendor coordination, and project oversight through installation.
For luxury interior designers in Scottsdale that also hold a general contractor license, such as Living with Lolo, the fee structure also covers construction oversight, subcontractor coordination, permitting, and site management. This integrated model means a single contract governs both the design and the build, which changes how fees are structured compared to a design-only firm.

How Luxury Interior Design Fees Are Structured in Scottsdale

Design firms in the Scottsdale market use several different fee structures. The most common approaches are a flat project fee, an hourly rate, a percentage of project cost, or some combination of these. Each has implications for how the project gets managed and what the final number looks like.
A flat project fee is negotiated upfront and covers a defined scope of services. This structure works well when the project scope is clearly defined before work begins. An hourly model charges for time spent, which can make total fees unpredictable for complex projects. A percentage-of-project-cost model ties the design fee to the total budget, typically ranging from 10 to 20 percent of the overall construction and furnishings budget. For a $500,000 project, that means a design fee between $50,000 and $100,000 before a single piece of furniture is purchased or a contractor is hired.
At Living with Lolo, the fee structure is transparent and scoped to the project from the start. Clients know what design services cost, what the procurement process looks like, and what the construction budget envelope is before any work begins. If you want to understand what that looks like for your specific project, you can book a consultation here.

Real Project Cost Examples

Numbers without context are not very useful, so here is what actual project investment looks like across different scopes in the Scottsdale and Paradise Valley market.
A primary suite redesign that includes new flooring, custom millwork, furniture sourcing, and updated lighting typically runs between $80,000 and $175,000 including design fees and all materials. A full kitchen remodel with custom cabinetry, premium appliances, countertop stone, and updated plumbing and electrical typically runs between $120,000 and $280,000 depending on size and finish level. A whole-home renovation across 4,000 to 7,000 square feet, including structural work, new finishes throughout, furniture, and custom elements, typically ranges from $600,000 to well over $1.2 million. These numbers reflect actual project scopes in this market, not theoretical estimates from national cost calculators.

What Luxury Interior Design Costs by Scope in Scottsdale

Scope matters more than room count when estimating project cost. A client doing a cosmetic refresh of an existing space will spend far less than a client removing walls, reconfiguring plumbing, and starting with a blank floor plan. The variables that most consistently drive cost up are structural changes, custom fabrication, high-end appliance packages, imported stone, and timeline compression.
In general, plan for design fees to represent 10 to 20 percent of the total project budget, furniture and finishes to represent 30 to 50 percent, and construction labor and materials to represent the remainder. For a full-service project in Scottsdale, it is reasonable to anticipate that total investment across all categories will be significantly above what national cost guides suggest. The Scottsdale luxury market operates in a different cost band than the national median.

The Number Most Clients Get Wrong

The most common budgeting mistake is treating design fees and furniture as the full cost of an interior design project. Clients who walk in with a furniture budget but no construction contingency frequently find that what they actually want requires permits, structural modifications, or mechanical work that was never part of the original estimate.
The second most common mistake is anchoring to national median data. The 2026 Houzz & Home Study reports a national median kitchen remodel cost of $24,000. In Scottsdale, that number does not describe the projects our clients are hiring us to do. A client expecting a luxury kitchen renovation at that price point is going to be surprised. This is not a flaw in the national data. It is a reflection of different market expectations and finish levels.
For context: Zillow data puts the average Paradise Valley home value at $3.45 million as of early 2026, up 13.5% year over year. In a market where homes carry that kind of value, a $24,000 kitchen is not a renovation. It is a refresh. The same Houzz study found that the top 10% of renovation projects nationally hit $150,000 or more. That range is closer to where our clients' projects begin.

Why the Firm You Choose Changes the Final Number

The same project can cost meaningfully different amounts depending on which firm you hire and how they manage vendor relationships, procurement, and construction. A firm with an in-house general contractor license can consolidate fees, eliminate markup layers between design and build, and reduce the schedule delays that add cost on any complex project.
Living with Lolo holds ROC 347577, an active Arizona general contractor license. This means we manage design and construction under one contract, which removes the coordination friction that typically adds both cost and time to a project when a separate GC is involved. For clients comparing proposals across multiple firms, it is worth asking whether the design firm and GC are the same entity, and if not, how fees are structured across both.

What to Do Before You Set a Budget

Before setting a number, get specific about scope. Walk through every room you plan to touch and make a list of what you want to change, what you want to keep, and what you are flexible on. The more specific you can be about finish levels and functional requirements, the more accurate an estimate will be.
Then build in a contingency. On any project with construction involved, plan for 10 to 15 percent of the total project budget to be held in reserve. This is not pessimism. It is how experienced project managers plan for the reality of working inside existing structures where surprises happen.
If you are in the early stages of planning a renovation in Scottsdale or Paradise Valley and want to talk through realistic project cost for your specific scope, reach out here. We will tell you honestly what your project is likely to cost and what variables will affect that number most.

Ready to Talk Through Your Project?

Living with Lolo is a full-service luxury interior design and design-build firm serving Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro. We hold an active Arizona ROC general contractor license and an interior design credential, which means we manage your entire project under one roof.

If you are planning a remodel, new construction project, or full furnishing and want honest numbers before you commit to anything, book a complimentary 15-minute discovery call.

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These numbers come from real projects we have quoted and completed in the last 18 months across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Arcadia. I quote projects every week. The figures here are not national averages from industry surveys — they reflect what we actually see in proposals in this specific market, where costs move faster than most national data captures. — Lauren Lerner, Living with Lolo

Want to understand what your specific project would cost?

A discovery call is the fastest way to get a realistic number for your home in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, or Arcadia. We will give you a straight answer.

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What interior design actually involves behind the scenes:

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the design fees for luxury interior design in Scottsdale?

Design fees for luxury interior design in Scottsdale typically range from $15,000 to $75,000 or more depending on project scope, square footage, and whether construction management is included. Note: these are design fees only — total project investment including furnishings and construction typically ranges from $75,000 to over $2,000,000 depending on scope. See the full breakdown above for real project examples.

Do interior designers charge hourly or a flat fee?

Both structures exist. Hourly rates for luxury interior designers in Scottsdale typically range from $150 to $350 per hour. Flat-fee arrangements are common for defined scopes. Full-service firms like Living with Lolo often charge a design fee plus a percentage of project cost or a procurement markup, which covers the full scope from concept through installation.

What is included in a full-service interior design fee?

A full-service fee covers space planning, concept development, material and finish specification, furniture and fixture procurement, vendor coordination, installation management, and styling. At Living with Lolo, full-service also includes licensed general contracting, which means the design and the construction are managed by the same team.

Is luxury interior design worth the cost?

For high-quality results that hold up over time, yes. The design fee is typically a small fraction of the total project cost, and the decisions made during the design phase affect every dollar spent on materials and construction. Under-investing in design is one of the most common ways otherwise good projects end up with expensive mistakes.

Ready to Transform Your Home?

Lauren Lerner and the Living with Lolo team work with clients across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

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Lauren Lerner, principal interior designer at Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner

Principal Designer, Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner is a luxury interior designer based in Scottsdale, AZ and the founder of Living with Lolo. Her work has been featured in Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Vogue, Martha Stewart Living, The Wall Street Journal, and GQ. She specializes in high-end residential design across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

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What Does a Luxury Remodel Cost in Scottsdale? 2026 Pricing Guide

What Does a Luxury Remodel Cost in Scottsdale? 2026 Pricing Guide

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The cost ranges in this guide come from real project budgets in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Arcadia from the past 18 months. Construction costs in this market move faster than national averages, and the high end of the luxury tier here is genuinely different from what you see in most other cities. I work in this market every day and the numbers here reflect that. — Lauren Lerner, Living with Lolo

Want a realistic budget range for your Scottsdale remodel?

We give clients a straight answer on budget during a discovery call. No vague ranges, no surprises.

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A Scottsdale kitchen transformation from vision through build:

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a luxury remodel cost in Scottsdale in 2026?

A luxury kitchen remodel in Scottsdale typically ranges from $80,000 to $200,000 or more for high-end custom work. A primary bathroom remodel runs $40,000 to $120,000+. A full whole-home renovation at the luxury level in Scottsdale or Paradise Valley typically ranges from $300,000 to over $1 million depending on scope, finishes, and structural changes.

What drives the cost of a luxury remodel in Arizona?

Labor and material costs in the Phoenix metro have risen significantly since 2021. Key cost drivers include custom cabinetry and millwork, high-end plumbing and lighting fixtures, structural changes that require permits, and the level of finish detail throughout. Projects with significant indoor-outdoor work or pool-adjacent construction carry additional complexity.

Does a remodel increase home value in Scottsdale?

Well-executed renovations in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley consistently return strong value, particularly kitchen and primary bathroom upgrades and additions that improve indoor-outdoor living. The Scottsdale luxury market rewards quality and design quality over square footage, so projects that improve livability and finish level typically see the strongest return.

How do I know if my budget is enough for a luxury remodel?

The most accurate way to understand your budget is to describe your scope to a design-build firm and ask for a realistic range. Budget ranges vary significantly by scope, material selection, and structural complexity. We give clients a straight budget estimate during a discovery call so they can plan accordingly.

Ready to Transform Your Home?

Lauren Lerner and the Living with Lolo team work with clients across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

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For anyone researching what permits actually require in Arizona, read our full guide to which projects require a licensed general contractor to pull permits. If you are comparing costs between hiring a design-build firm versus two separate vendors, our luxury interior design cost breakdown addresses that directly with real project examples. You can explore our Scottsdale general contractor page and Paradise Valley general contractor page for more on how we manage licensed construction work in each market.

Lauren Lerner, principal interior designer at Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner

Principal Designer, Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner is a luxury interior designer based in Scottsdale, AZ and the founder of Living with Lolo. Her work has been featured in Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Vogue, Martha Stewart Living, The Wall Street Journal, and GQ. She specializes in high-end residential design across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

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Living with Lolo Named One of the Fastest-Growing Interior Design Firms in the Southwest | Inc. Regionals 2026

Living with Lolo Named One of the Fastest-Growing Interior Design Firms in the Southwest | Inc. Regionals 2026

On March 31, 2026, Inc. named Living with Lolo to its Regionals 2026: Southwest list, which recognizes the fastest-growing private companies across Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah. The official press release marks the first time a Scottsdale interior design and licensed general contracting firm has appeared on the list. You can view the full Inc. Regionals Southwest list at Inc.com.

What the Inc. Regionals List Recognizes

Inc. Regionals is one of the most respected measures of business growth in the country. The list is not based on revenue size, brand recognition, or longevity. It is based purely on verified revenue growth over a three-year period. Companies that make the list have demonstrated consistent, compounding growth at a time when the residential design and construction industry was navigating higher material costs, longer lead times, and significant shifts in how clients approach major home projects.
For the 2026 Southwest region, 949 companies earned a spot on the full national list, with Southwest honorees collectively adding 9,633 jobs and $5.2 billion to the regional economy. Living with Lolo was one of a very small number of firms in the residential interior design and design-build category to earn inclusion.

Why This Recognition Matters for a Design-Build Firm

Most growth awards in the design industry are based on peer nominations or editorial selection. The Inc. Regionals list is different. Every company submits financial documentation that Inc. verifies independently. That means the growth is real, not self-reported or chosen by a committee.
Living with Lolo operates as a full-service interior design and licensed general contracting firm in Scottsdale, Arizona. Lauren Lerner LLC holds ROC 347577, the firm's active Arizona Registrar of Contractors license, which means the team manages design, permitting, procurement, and construction under one contract. The growth that Inc. measured reflects what happens when clients no longer have to coordinate between two separate firms for a single project.

What Has Driven the Growth

Over the past three years, the firm has expanded the scope and complexity of projects it takes on. Projects that once centered on furnishings and styling have grown into full remodels, structural renovations, and new construction builds. Clients across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the wider Phoenix metro have hired Living with Lolo to lead projects from concept through construction completion.
This integrated approach drives a different kind of client relationship. Rather than managing multiple vendors and timelines, clients work with a single team that controls design decisions and construction execution. That structure allows the firm to take on more complex projects and deliver them more efficiently, which is reflected in both client retention and referral volume.

A Note from Lauren

"Being recognized by Inc. is meaningful because it reflects what our team has built, not just the projects we have completed. Growing a design and construction firm the right way, with real licenses, real accountability, and clients who trust you with their homes, takes time. This recognition confirms that the approach is working."

What This Means for Clients

For homeowners in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley who are evaluating firms for a major renovation or new build interior, the Inc. Regionals recognition offers one additional data point. A company growing at this rate, with verified financials, is a company that is operating efficiently and delivering results that generate referrals. Growth at this level does not happen without a strong repeat and referral base.
If you are early in the process of planning a renovation or new construction interior and want to understand what working with a design-build firm looks like, the Living with Lolo Process page walks through how a project moves from the initial consultation through final installation. You can also book a call directly to talk through your project scope.

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Being named to the Inc. Regionals list means our growth is independently verified, not self-reported. We grew because our clients referred us and because the design-build model we built creates better outcomes than the traditional design-then-hand-off approach. The recognition is a measure of what our clients experienced, and that is what I am most proud of. — Lauren Lerner

Related Resources

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Inc. Regionals list?

Inc. Regionals is a list published by Inc. Magazine that recognizes the fastest-growing private companies in specific regions of the United States. Companies are ranked by revenue growth over a three-year period, and the list is independently verified rather than self-nominated.

Is Living with Lolo a boutique or large firm?

Living with Lolo is a boutique design-build firm. We intentionally work on a limited number of projects at a time so our clients receive direct attention from Lauren and the core team throughout their project. The Inc. Regionals recognition reflects the quality of our work and client referrals, not a high volume of projects.

Ready to Transform Your Home?

Lauren Lerner and the Living with Lolo team work with clients across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

Book a Discovery Call

The growth described in this post is built on a model that most design firms in Scottsdale cannot replicate: holding both an interior design credential and an active Arizona general contractor license under one roof. If you want to understand what that means for your project, read about what licensed design-build actually covers and what these projects cost in the Scottsdale market.

Lauren Lerner, principal interior designer at Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner

Principal Designer, Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner is a luxury interior designer based in Scottsdale, AZ and the founder of Living with Lolo. Her work has been featured in Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Vogue, Martha Stewart Living, The Wall Street Journal, and GQ. She specializes in high-end residential design across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

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Do Interior Designers Handle Permits in Arizona?

Do Interior Designers Handle Permits in Arizona?

by | Mar 19, 2026 | Modern Interior Design Ideas, Scottsdale Interior Design Projects

The short answer is: most interior designers in Arizona do not and legally cannot pull permits. Permits in Arizona are pulled by the licensed general contractor on a project. An interior designer who does not hold an active ROC general contractor license cannot sign off on a permit application, take legal responsibility for the permitted scope of work, or manage the inspection process that follows — that is the role of a licensed interior designer and general contractor in Scottsdale.
This is one of the most important distinctions between hiring a design-only firm and hiring a licensed design-build firm. It shapes who is actually accountable for your project from a legal and practical standpoint , and it affects your timeline, your budget, and your risk exposure when something unexpected happens during construction.

What Requires a Permit in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley

Arizona municipalities require permits for most work beyond cosmetic updates. In Scottsdale specifically, the following typically require a permit: structural changes including wall removal and additions, electrical panel upgrades and new circuits, plumbing modifications including relocating fixtures or adding new lines, HVAC changes, window and door replacements that change the rough opening size, decks, covered patios, and pool work.
Work that typically does not require a permit includes painting, flooring replacement, cabinet refacing (not replacement), fixture swaps where the rough-in location does not change, and most furniture and lighting changes. But the moment you are moving a wall, relocating a sink, or upgrading electrical service, you are in permitted territory.
Paradise Valley has its own permitting office and its own requirements, which differ in some respects from Scottsdale's. Chandler, Tempe, and other Valley municipalities each have their own processes. There is no universal answer that covers every city , which is one of the reasons having a licensed contractor who works regularly in these jurisdictions is valuable. We know the requirements and the review timelines for each municipality we work in.

What Happens When Work Goes Unpermitted

Unpermitted work creates compounding problems. The most immediate: no inspection occurred, which means no one with authority verified the work was done correctly. If something fails later , a wire that was not properly connected, a structural change that was not properly engineered , you are holding the liability.
The longer-term problem surfaces at resale. Title companies review permit history. Buyers' inspectors look for signs of unpermitted work. When unpermitted structural or systems work is discovered during a sale, you typically face either a renegotiated price, a requirement to obtain retroactive permits (which often requires opening walls for inspection), or both. We have seen transactions fall apart over this.
In Scottsdale and Paradise Valley, where homes transact at high values and buyers conduct thorough due diligence, this is a real exposure. It is not worth the short-term convenience of skipping the process.

How Living with Lolo Manages Permitting

Because Living with Lolo holds an active Arizona ROC general contractor license (ROC 347577), we pull permits directly on every project that requires them. We identify what needs a permit during the design phase, submit applications, and manage the inspection schedule as part of the project timeline.
For clients, this means there is one point of contact for every permit question. When an inspector schedules a visit, we coordinate it. When a correction is required, we address it. You are not tracking down a separate contractor to follow up on paperwork that your designer submitted a request for two weeks ago.
It also means the permit timeline is built into the project schedule from the start. We know how long Scottsdale review typically takes, how Paradise Valley's process compares, and what to expect at each stage. That predictability is the difference between a project that runs on schedule and one that loses six weeks waiting on something that could have been anticipated.

I pull permits in multiple Arizona municipalities every month. What is required in Scottsdale is different from Paradise Valley, Chandler, or Mesa. I have navigated this process across dozens of projects and dozens of jurisdictions across the Valley, and the answer to most permit questions is: it depends, and you need someone on your team who knows the answer for your specific project and city. , Lauren Lerner, Living with Lolo

Have questions about permits for your Scottsdale or Paradise Valley project?

We handle permits as part of our standard process. A discovery call is the fastest way to understand what your specific project requires.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do interior designers pull permits in Arizona?

Interior designers who are not licensed general contractors do not pull permits in Arizona. Permits must be pulled by the licensed contractor on the project. At Living with Lolo, we are both the designer and the licensed general contractor, so we handle permitting as part of our standard process.

What work requires a permit in Scottsdale?

In Scottsdale, permits are typically required for any work involving structural changes, electrical upgrades, plumbing modifications, HVAC changes, additions, and most kitchen or bathroom remodels involving moving walls or changing systems. Cosmetic updates like painting, flooring replacement, and cabinet refacing generally do not require permits.

Who is responsible for permits when hiring a design-build firm?

When you hire a design-build firm that holds a general contractor license, the firm is responsible for identifying what requires permits, submitting applications, scheduling inspections, and obtaining final sign-offs. This is one of the key advantages of the design-build model versus hiring a designer and contractor separately.

Can I do a remodel without permits in Arizona?

Doing work that requires permits without obtaining them creates serious liability issues, including problems at resale when title companies review permit history. Beyond legal exposure, unpermitted work also means no inspections occurred during construction, which creates risk if something goes wrong later.

Ready to Transform Your Home?

Lauren Lerner and the Living with Lolo team work with clients across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

Book a Discovery Call

If you want to understand the full picture of what a licensed design-build firm does that a design-only firm cannot, read our guide to holding both an interior design credential and an Arizona GC license. For context on what a permitted renovation costs in this market, our interior design cost guide includes real numbers from projects that required full permitting. You can also read the questions you should ask any designer before hiring them, including whether they hold an active Arizona ROC license.

Lauren Lerner, principal interior designer at Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner

Principal Designer, Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner is a luxury interior designer based in Scottsdale, AZ and the founder of Living with Lolo. Her work has been featured in Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Vogue, Martha Stewart Living, The Wall Street Journal, and GQ. She specializes in high-end residential design across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

What Questions Should You Ask a Luxury Interior Designer Before You Hire Them?

What Questions Should You Ask a Luxury Interior Designer Before You Hire Them?

by | Mar 17, 2026 | Interior Design Tips, Modern Interior Design Ideas, Scottsdale Interior Design Projects

The clients who end up with the best projects are usually the ones who asked the most direct questions before signing anything. Not because asking hard questions makes the process adversarial , it does the opposite. It establishes that you are a thoughtful client and gets both parties aligned on expectations before the work begins. After more than a decade running projects as a luxury interior designer in Scottsdale AZ, these are the questions I would want prospective clients to ask me.

Questions About Credentials and Accountability

Are you a licensed general contractor, or do you work with one? The answer tells you who is legally accountable for the construction portion of your project. If the designer works with a contractor they recommend, those are two separate businesses. When something goes wrong during the build, you need to know exactly who owns the problem. Ask for the ROC license number and verify it at roc.az.gov.
Who pulls the permits on my project? Permits are pulled by the licensed contractor, not by an unlicensed designer. If the answer is "our contractor partner" rather than "we do," you have two firms sharing your project. That creates coordination gaps that cost you money.
Who will be on site during construction? A designer whose involvement ends at the drawing stage is not managing your build. The designer should be present during construction to make real-time decisions that protect the design intent as field conditions arise.

Questions About Process and Communication

How do you handle change orders? Every renovation encounters the unexpected. How a firm responds to that reality reveals more about how the project will run than any other question. A clear, fair, well-documented change order process is a sign of a professionally run firm. Vagueness here is a warning.
What is my primary point of contact and how are decisions communicated? Understand who you will actually be talking to throughout the project, how often you should expect updates, and what the process is for decisions that need a quick turnaround. Communication failures are the most common source of client dissatisfaction on renovation projects , not the design itself.
How do you manage the design process when I have competing preferences with my partner? If two people with different aesthetics are living in the home, a good designer will have a process for working through those differences rather than picking sides or defaulting to whoever is in the room. Ask about this directly.

Questions About the Work Itself

Can I see completed projects , not renderings or in-progress work? Finished homes, professionally photographed, at a comparable scope and finish level to what you are planning. Ask specifically whether the projects shown were ones the firm designed AND built, or only designed. There is a meaningful difference.
What is a realistic budget range for my scope? A designer who will not give you a budget range before signing is not doing you a service. You need to know whether your budget and their project minimums are aligned before either of you invests time in a design direction. We give clients a realistic range on the first call.
What do you see as the primary design challenge or opportunity in my home? The answer tells you whether the designer has thought specifically about your project or is giving you a generic pitch. A designer who has walked your space and can speak to its specific constraints and potential is someone who has been paying attention.

Questions About Fees and Contract Structure

What is included in your design fee and what triggers additional charges? Understand how revisions are handled, whether additional design meetings cost extra, and what happens if the scope changes after the contract is signed. Clarity on this upfront prevents friction later.
Do you mark up materials and furniture, and how does that work? Most design firms mark up trade-priced items. The question is not whether this happens but how transparent the firm is about it. A firm that is clear about their markup structure is easier to budget around than one that is vague.

I have been answering these questions from prospective clients for over a decade. The ones who ask the right questions upfront end up with better projects. The ones who skip due diligence and choose based on portfolio photos alone often regret it. These are the questions I would want you to ask me, and I am prepared to answer every one of them. , Lauren Lerner, Living with Lolo

Ready to ask us these questions directly?

A discovery call is 30 minutes and completely free. We will answer everything on this list and give you a realistic read on your project.

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What a real design walkthrough with our clients looks like:

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the first question I should ask a luxury interior designer?

Ask to see projects that are similar in scope and style to what you want, and ask how the designer handled specific challenges on those projects. A portfolio with beautiful photos is expected. What separates good firms is how they talk about problems and how they solved them.

How do I know if a luxury interior designer is right for me?

Beyond portfolio fit, look for clear communication about process, honest answers on budget and timeline, and evidence that they have done projects like yours before. A firm that listens more than it pitches in the first meeting is typically a better long-term working relationship.

What is the difference between a designer and a design-build firm?

A designer handles the aesthetic planning and specification but passes construction to a separate general contractor. A design-build firm, like Living with Lolo, handles both under one roof. This matters when accuracy of execution is as important as the design concept itself.

Should I interview multiple interior designers?

Yes, especially for whole-home or significant renovation projects. Most firms offer a free or low-cost discovery call. Talking to two or three firms gives you a basis for comparison on both working style and fee structure.

Ready to Transform Your Home?

Lauren Lerner and the Living with Lolo team work with clients across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.

Book a Discovery Call

Two of the most important questions on this list relate directly to licensing. Read our full breakdown of what an Arizona general contractor license covers and which construction projects legally require a licensed GC to pull permits. If you are also trying to understand what the right firm will cost before your first conversation, our luxury interior design cost guide gives you real numbers from completed Scottsdale and Paradise Valley projects. When you are ready to start that conversation, you can book a complimentary discovery call with our team.

Lauren Lerner, principal interior designer at Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner

Principal Designer, Living with Lolo

Lauren Lerner is a luxury interior designer based in Scottsdale, AZ and the founder of Living with Lolo. Her work has been featured in Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Vogue, Martha Stewart Living, The Wall Street Journal, and GQ. She specializes in high-end residential design across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro area.