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Interior Wall Cladding Ideas for Australian Homes in 2026 - Sketch Australia

Interior Wall Cladding Ideas for Australian Homes in 2026

Modern living room with stone fireplace and large windows overlooking a garden.

Interior wall cladding is having a moment in Australian homes, and not just in architect-designed builds. More homeowners are adding cladding to living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, and even hallways because they want walls that feel intentional and textured, not just painted.

The challenge is that most of the inspiration content online is from Northern Hemisphere design sources that do not account for Australian light, climate, and building standards. What reads as cosy in a Scandinavian interior can feel heavy and dark in a bright Sydney home.

These ideas are based on what actually works in Australian conditions and what we have seen our customers execute successfully.

 

Feature Wall Cladding: The Starting Point for Most Projects

If you are new to interior cladding, a single feature wall is the right place to start. It limits the risk, it is easier to reverse if your taste changes, and it allows you to see how a material behaves in your specific space before committing to a whole room.

The living room feature wall behind a sofa or TV unit is the most popular choice. A bedroom feature wall behind the bed head is another. Both are low-risk applications with high visual impact.

Slate and Sandstone in Living Areas

Slate and sandstone veneer panels on a feature wall create a natural warmth that painted walls or printed wallpaper cannot match. The key is choosing the right tone. Dark slates work well in south-facing rooms with softer, more diffused light. Lighter sandstone and travertine finishes suit north and east-facing rooms that get strong morning and afternoon sun.

Browse our slate collection and sandstone collection to see the current range.

Marble Finish Panels for Contemporary Spaces

Marble is one of the most searched wall finish options in Australia right now, partly driven by kitchen and bathroom renovation content on social media. Real marble is expensive and requires ongoing maintenance. Marble-finish carbon crystal boards give you a similar visual result at a lower cost with none of the sealing and maintenance requirements of natural stone.

For those who want the real thing, our thin marble stone veneer panels bring genuine marble character with a fraction of the weight and installation complexity of marble slabs.

 

Hallway and Entryway Cladding

Hallways are underrated cladding opportunities. The wall you see when you walk through the front door sets the tone for the whole house, and many people leave it as a plain painted surface because they do not spend time there.

A half-height cladding panel along a hallway wall adds texture and visual interest without making the space feel smaller. Stone veneer in a neutral tone — travertine, light sandstone, or concrete finish — works well in this application because it reads as a material rather than a colour, which ages better as you change other elements of the house.

The Sketch Craft Stone 3D PU panels are a popular choice for hallways because they create a three-dimensional texture at a very manageable weight — important in hallways where the wall substrate is often standard plasterboard.

 

Kitchen Wall Cladding: A Practical and Design Consideration

The kitchen is where wall cladding needs to do more than just look good. Splashback areas need to withstand heat, steam, cooking residue, and regular cleaning. A lot of materials that look great in a living room are not suitable directly behind a cooktop.

For kitchen splashbacks, we recommend carbon crystal boards or polished stone veneer with a heat-resistant sealant. Both clean up easily with a damp cloth, neither requires grout, and both can handle the environment behind a standard gas or electric cooktop.

For kitchen feature walls away from the cooking zone, any of the flexible stone options work well. The liquid rust finish is particularly striking in a kitchen setting because it adds warmth and a handmade quality that contrasts well against stainless steel appliances.

See real kitchen applications in our kitchen gallery.

 

Bedroom Wall Cladding: Making It Feel Considered, Not Busy

The mistake most people make with bedroom cladding is choosing something too dramatic. A bedroom wall should feel calm and restful. The goal is a surface that adds texture and depth without competing with the rest of the room.

Fabric-backed carbon crystal boards in a muted marble or white tone are well suited to master bedrooms. Thin slate in a cool grey or charcoal works for a more architectural feel. Both are quiet materials that do not distract.

The practical consideration in a bedroom is installation without dust and noise. Thin stone veneer panels can be cut with scissors or a knife, which makes them one of the easiest materials to install in a lived-in home.

 

Exterior Cladding That Transitions Indoors

One design approach that has become popular in Australian architecture is using the same stone cladding material on an exterior wall and continuing it indoors through a large glass door or window. The visual connection between inside and outside is a strong feature in open-plan homes.

Sketch Australia's flexible stone veneer panels are UV rated and suitable for both internal and external applications. Our exterior wall gallery shows how this transition has been executed in real Australian projects.

The Australian Institute of Architects regularly features projects that use continuous natural materials through indoor and outdoor spaces as a defining characteristic of contemporary Australian residential design.

 

Common Mistakes to Avoid With Interior Cladding

        Installing without a sample first: Wall colours, lighting, and adjacent finishes change how a material looks dramatically. Always order a sample and live with it in the space for a few days before committing.

        Ignoring substrate preparation: Panels bond best to flat, dry, structurally sound surfaces. Skipping substrate prep is the most common cause of panels lifting over time.

        Using the wrong adhesive: Different substrates require different adhesives. Our installation guide specifies the right adhesive for each surface type.

        Over-cladding: More is not always better. A single well-chosen feature wall is usually more effective than cladding every surface in a room.

 

For personalised advice on your project, contact the Sketch Australia team through our contact page or visit us in person.

 

Author

Written by the Sketch Australia design and product team. The application guidance in this article is drawn from direct experience across residential and commercial cladding projects in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and regional Australia.