Quick answer: Decorating a rented Indian flat without losing your deposit means working with textiles, floor-standing furniture, command strips rated for your surface type, and removable elements. The entry, living room, bedroom, and balcony each have specific no-drill solutions that work in the typical Indian apartment with bare white walls and basic fixtures. Total cost ranges from Rs 2,000 to 8,000 for a transformation that comes with you when you leave.
The Indian rental situation has specific constraints that generic “renter-friendly decor” guides from the UK and the US don’t address. Your lease is probably 11 months with a 2 to 3 month deposit on the line. Your landlord probably lives nearby or in the same building. The walls are almost certainly bare plaster or enamel paint over plaster, which pulls differently than the drywall that those foreign guides assume. And you may move again in a year.
The goal here is a flat that looks like you live in it, not like you are camping in it, without creating anything you cannot undo in an afternoon.
—
Entry: The first impression
The problem with most Indian rental entries is the bare wall above the shoe rack and the scatter of footwear that makes the entryway look like a departure lounge.
The no-drill approach: A narrow console table or a wooden shoe rack with a closed top surface gives you a horizontal surface. A woven jute basket (Rs 480) on top of it holds keys, masks, and whatever gets dumped there daily. A wall-hung mirror works on command strips rated for 3 to 5 kg on painted plaster, removes cleanly, and makes a narrow entry feel twice as wide.
What to avoid: Heavy frames, screwed-in hooks for bags, or anything that penetrates the door frame or wall. The command strip adhesive test: pull it off after 7 days and look at the wall. If there’s no paint lifting, you’re good for heavier items.
Cost: Rs 800 to 1,500.
—
Living room: Personality without paint
White rental walls communicate two things: temporary and institutional. Textiles fix both without touching the wall.
Cushion covers: Six cushion covers in one colour family change the entire sofa. Cotton, washable, stored flat, costs Rs 150 to 300 per cover. Buy covers for every season and swap them. The cushion inserts stay the same for years.
A cotton durrie or rug: A flat-weave cotton rug defines the seating area, adds warmth in winter, and is carried out rolled up when you leave. Rs 800 to 2,500 for a good size. Avoid jute or seagrass rugs in living rooms because they don’t survive the foot traffic and monsoon-damp feet of an Indian household.
One shelf on command strips: IKEA-style floating shelves with command strip installation hold 4 to 6 kg, which is enough for three small plants, a few books, and a candle. Test the strips on an inconspicuous wall patch first. The plaster quality in older buildings sometimes pulls with the adhesive.
Plants: A tiered planter stand in a corner costs Rs 800 to 1,500, holds five pots, and moves without any trace. Three pothos and two snake plants on a stand make a corner look like it was designed rather than left empty.
Cost for living room: Rs 2,000 to 4,000.
—
Bedroom: Three things that change everything
Most rental bedrooms have the same formula: one bed, one almirah, one ceiling fan, bare walls. Three additions change the feel significantly.
Bedside table or stool: Even a wooden stool or a small cotton-covered cube beside the bed creates the surface that every bedroom needs for the water glass, phone, and book. Most rental bedrooms have no bedside provision at all. Rs 300 to 800 from any furniture or home goods shop.
Curtains: Rental windows often have basic nets or nothing. Proper cotton curtains hang from the existing rod, cost Rs 500 to 1,500 per panel, and come down in minutes. The difference in the feel of a bedroom with proper curtains versus a thin net is dramatic. Blackout lining on one panel is the detail that makes Delhi summer mornings bearable.
A basket for the floor: A lined jute basket with leather handles (Rs 799) beside the bed handles dupattas, throws, or the laundry that accumulates before washing day. It looks deliberate, not messy.
Cost for bedroom: Rs 1,500 to 3,000.
—
Kitchen: The countertop problem
Rental kitchens usually have too much bare countertop or too little, depending on the layout, and the countertops are almost always either granite slabs with no character or plain tile. You cannot change either without permission.
What you can change: Everything on the counter. A small jute basket for garlic and onions replaces the plastic bag. A wooden utensil holder replaces the steel cup or the scatter of spatulas. A small plant on the windowsill with 2 hours of morning sun is a money plant or a small herb pot.
The fridge: A small magnetic chalkboard sheet or a few good-quality fridge magnets change the largest blank vertical surface in the kitchen for under Rs 200. Not decorative in a design sense, but functional in the way that makes a kitchen feel occupied.
Cost for kitchen: Rs 500 to 1,000.
—
Balcony: The easiest room to transform
The balcony is paradoxically the most transformable space in a rental flat because almost nothing about it is structural. Pots, stands, and string lights are inherently temporary.
Three things:
A tiered planter stand with five plants. This costs Rs 1,200 to 2,000, takes an afternoon to set up, and leaves no trace when you go.
String lights at 2700K warm white, wrapped around the railing on command clips or simply threaded through the railing grilles. Rs 400 to 800 for a 5-metre run.
One small ceramic pot (Rs 120) per railing section with a trailing pothos or a seasonal flowering plant. The railing clips leave no marks.
Cost for balcony: Rs 1,500 to 2,500.
—
The deposit protection rules
| Action | Deposit risk | No-drill alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Nails or screws in walls | High, fills required or deducted | Command strips, floor-standing items |
| Paint or wallpaper | High, repainting deducted | Textiles, shelves on strips |
| Fixed shelving or hooks | Medium, if visible or numerous | Freestanding shelving units |
| Pot nails or cup hooks | Low to medium | Tension rod systems, baskets |
| Furniture marks on floor | Low | Felt pads under all furniture legs |
| Stains on walls | Medium | Keep everything washable, nothing near white walls |
The basic principle: anything that can be undone in under five minutes with no visible trace carries no deposit risk. Command strips peel cleanly off enamel paint if used as directed and not overloaded. Standard plaster paint pulls more easily than enamel, so test first.
—
Frequently asked questions
How can I decorate my rented flat in India without losing the deposit?
Stick to floor-standing items, textiles, and command-strip mounted pieces within their weight ratings. Nothing screwed into walls, no paint, no wallpaper. A floor rug, cushion cover swap, tiered plant stand, and command-strip mirror cover the most impactful changes with zero deposit risk.
Do command strips work on Indian rental walls?
On enamel paint over plaster, yes, if you buy strips rated for your load and follow the 24-hour cure time before loading them. On standard oil-based paint over old plaster, test first on an inconspicuous spot. The adhesive occasionally lifts paint on surfaces with weak paint adhesion.
What is the best way to make a rental flat look nice cheaply?
Cushion cover swap, one good cotton rug, curtains on the existing rod, and three plants on a tiered stand. Total under Rs 3,000 and all of it is portable. The textile changes alone do more for how a room reads than any single furniture piece.
Can I have a garden on a rented flat balcony?
Yes. Container gardening on a balcony is accepted in virtually all Indian housing societies and doesn’t require landlord permission. Use floor-standing plant stands, pots hung on the inside of the railing, and ceiling hooks in the slab for hanging plants. Nothing that touches or damages the wall.
What furniture should I buy for a rental flat in India?
Lightweight furniture you’ll reuse: a cotton rug, a simple wooden side table, a floor mirror, a tiered plant stand. Skip the temptation to buy custom storage that won’t fit your next flat. Woven baskets and modular shelving units travel better than built-in solutions.
