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See what window remodel trends look like in 2026, then connect with a local pro to share your vision and see what's possible for your home.
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2026 Window Trends
Four window trends shaping homes in 2026.
The looks getting attention in residential design right now — use them as inspiration before the conversation.
Black-framed contemporary
Dark, slim frames cut a sharp line against light siding or brick. The contrast is what does the work — it makes any window look architectural without renovating the rest of the house.
Floor-to-ceiling glass
Picture windows that run from baseboard to ceiling pull the outdoors inside. Best for great rooms, stairwells, and any space where the view is half the design.
Mixed materials
Warm wood interior trim paired with black metal cladding outside. The look reads modern from the curb and traditional from the kitchen table. Same window, two personalities.
Classic bay & bow
Curved, three-pane bay windows are back — adding a bench seat, a reading nook, or a small pocket of extra living space without touching the foundation.
Sources: Houzz U.S. Home Design Trends, NAHB What Home Buyers Really Want, and ProRemodeler product trend coverage, 2025–2026.
Window Types
Six common window types — and what each one does best.
Function shapes form. Knowing what each type does makes the conversation easier.
Double-hung
Two operable sashes that slide up and down. The classic American window — easy to clean from inside, fits almost any architectural style.
Single-hung
Looks identical to a double-hung but only the bottom sash moves. Slightly less expensive, slightly fewer moving parts to maintain.
Casement
Hinged on one side, cranks open like a door. The strongest airflow of any window type — popular for kitchens and rooms above sinks.
Awning
Hinged at the top, opens outward from the bottom. Lets air in during light rain — often paired above doors or under a larger fixed window.
Slider
Slides horizontally on a track. Wide, uninterrupted views with a low-profile silhouette — good for rooms where vertical clearance is tight.
Picture
Fixed in place, doesn't open. Maximum glass, minimum frame — designed for the view, not for ventilation.
Most home projects mix three or four types — a picture window framing the view, casements for airflow, double-hungs for everything else.
How It Works
Three steps from inspiration to install.
No directory dump. No five contractors calling at once. One match, one focused conversation, on your timeline.
Tell us about your home
Answer five quick questions about your home, your current windows, and your timeline. Takes under two minutes.
We find your match
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Have the conversation
Bring your style ideas, your timeline, and your questions to one local windows pro. No pressure, no commitment — keep what fits, walk if it doesn't.
How do I pick a window style that fits my home's architecture?
Black frames, white, or wood — which holds up over time?
Can new windows really change a home's curb appeal?
Why one contractor instead of getting three or four quotes?
How is this free? What's the catch?
Ready?
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