9 min read
July 2026
How Much Does a Full-Service Interior Designer Cost in Arizona? (2026 Guide)
A full-service interior designer in Arizona costs $75,000 to $2 million or more, depending on whether the project is furnishing only, a full remodel, or new construction with a licensed contractor managing the build. Scope moves that number more than square footage does.
This guide breaks down what drives full-service interior design pricing across Arizona's luxury markets, including Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and Silverleaf, with real project ranges instead of national averages that understate what this market actually costs. It also covers what full service includes, how design-build pricing compares with hiring a designer and a general contractor separately, and what to expect at each investment level.
What "Full-Service" Actually Means in Arizona
"Full service" gets used loosely across the design industry, so it is worth being specific about what it covers before talking about cost. At
Living with Lolo, a full-service engagement includes concept development, space planning, material and finish selection, furniture and fixture procurement, vendor coordination, and white-glove installation. For clients who also need construction, full service extends further: permitting, trade coordination, site supervision, and punch-list management through the final walkthrough.
Not every firm offers all of this under one roof. Many interior designers stop at selections and hand the project to a separate general contractor, which is where communication gaps and change orders tend to creep in. Lauren Lerner and the Living with Lolo team hold an active Arizona ROC general contractor license, ROC #347577, which means design and construction are managed under a single contract instead of two. That structure, combined with recognition as Phoenix Magazine's Best Interior Design three consecutive years (2024, 2025, and 2026), is a big reason Arizona homeowners consolidate design and construction under one firm rather than two.
If you are trying to figure out whether your project needs full design and construction management or just design services, our
interior design services page breaks down the different engagement types available.
How Full-Service Pricing Is Structured
Full-service interior design fees in Arizona are typically structured one of three ways: a flat project fee, a percentage of the total project cost, or a combination of a design fee plus a procurement markup on furnishings and materials. Percentage-based models are common on design-build projects and usually range from 10 to 20 percent of total construction and furnishings spend.
For a $500,000 project, that translates to a design fee between $50,000 and $100,000 before any furniture is purchased or a contractor is hired. Flat fees work better for narrowly defined scopes, such as furnishing two or three rooms, where the deliverables are clear from the start.
Living with Lolo scopes every project before work begins, so clients know the design fee, the estimated procurement budget, and the construction envelope up front. Homeowners comparing proposals across Scottsdale and Paradise Valley firms should ask exactly which of these fee structures a designer uses, since the same total spend can look very different depending on how it is broken out.
Real Cost Ranges by Full-Service Project Type
Numbers are more useful with context, so here is what full-service investment actually looks like across common project types in Arizona.
$75,000 to $450,000 or more: Furnishing Only
This tier covers projects where the home's layout and finishes stay the same and the scope is furniture, lighting, art, and styling. A two- to three-room furnishing project starts around $75,000, while a full-home furnishing package for a larger residence can run $450,000 or more depending on square footage and finish level.
$400,000 to $1.5 million or more: Remodel With Full-Service Design
Projects that combine construction, such as kitchen and bathroom remodels, structural changes, or whole-home renovations, with full interior design and furnishing typically fall in this range. A whole-home remodel across 4,000 to 7,000 square feet with new finishes throughout often lands at the higher end.
$500,000 to $2,000,000 or more: Full Design-Build
This is the most comprehensive tier: design, construction management, procurement, and installation under a single contract with Living with Lolo as the licensed general contractor. New construction interior design and large-scale renovations with significant structural work fall here.
These ranges reflect real projects quoted and completed in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Arcadia over the past 18 months, not theoretical estimates from a national calculator.
What the Data Shows About Full-Service Costs
Every cost guide should be measured against outside data, not just one firm's project history. The
2026 Houzz & Home Study puts the national median kitchen remodel at $24,000, and the study found that the top 10 percent of renovation projects nationally reach $150,000 or more. In Arizona's luxury market, that top-tier national number is closer to the entry point for a full kitchen remodel with premium finishes.
Home values help explain the gap.
Zillow data shows the average Paradise Valley home value at $3.45 million as of early 2026, up 13.5 percent year over year. Scottsdale and North Scottsdale communities like Silverleaf and DC Ranch carry similarly high price points. When a home is valued in the millions, a design and construction budget scaled to a $24,000 national median kitchen remodel does not match the finish level, materials, or expectations of the homeowner or the resale market.
This is the context that matters most for anyone budgeting a full-service project in Arizona: national averages are a starting reference, not a target.
Why Scottsdale and Paradise Valley Cost More Than the National Average
Beyond home values, a few Arizona-specific factors push full-service costs higher than national medians. Custom millwork, imported stone, and high-end appliance packages are common requests in this market and carry premium pricing regardless of location. Construction timelines in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley also tend to compress around the traditional October-to-April season, which can add cost when trades are in high demand.
Neighborhood-specific requirements matter too. Homes in
Silverleaf and DC Ranch often have HOA architectural review processes that affect timeline and design decisions, while
Paradise Valley estates frequently involve larger square footage and more extensive outdoor living space than a typical remodel.
Arcadia renovations often include older homes with structural updates that add scope beyond cosmetic work.
None of this means Arizona pricing is arbitrary. It reflects a market where home values, finish expectations, and project complexity all run above the national norm.
Design-Build vs. Hiring a Designer and a Contractor Separately
One of the biggest cost variables in a full-service project is whether design and construction are managed by one firm or two. When a homeowner hires an interior designer and a separate general contractor, each party typically adds its own markup, and miscommunication between the two teams often leads to change orders that add both cost and time.
Living with Lolo holds ROC #347577, an active Arizona general contractor license, which means design and construction are managed under one contract. Clients working with an integrated
general contractor and designer in Scottsdale typically see fewer change orders and less cost duplication than those coordinating two separate firms. This does not always lower the sticker price, since a licensed design-build firm still charges for the same scope of work, but it reduces the coordination costs and delays that inflate a separately managed project's final cost.
For homeowners evaluating proposals, it is worth asking every firm whether design and construction are handled in-house or handed off to a subcontracted GC.
How to Budget for a Full-Service Project in Arizona
Before setting a number, get specific about scope. Walk through every room involved and separate what is changing from what is staying, since that distinction affects the estimate more than total square footage. Then build in a contingency of 10 to 15 percent of the total budget for any project that includes construction, since unexpected conditions inside existing walls are common on renovation work.
Timeline affects budget too. Furnishing-only projects typically run 3 to 6 months from concept to installation, while design-build projects that include construction usually take 6 to 18 months depending on scope.
Homeowners planning a project in
Scottsdale kitchen remodeling or a full
bathroom renovation should also ask for a written breakdown separating the design fee, construction budget, and furnishings budget, since bundling these into one number makes it difficult to compare proposals across firms.
If you are researching an
interior designer in Scottsdale or planning a project anywhere in the Phoenix metro, a discovery call is the fastest way to get a realistic number for your specific home and scope.