That’s a great question 👌 — because disagreements between you and your interior designer are totally normal (colours, finishes, layouts, budget choices). What matters is how they handle it.
Here’s how a professional designer in Delhi NCR should approach disagreements:
✅ Healthy Ways Designers Handle Disagreements
1. Listening First
- They hear why you want a certain choice (colour, layout, material).
- Good designers don’t dismiss you — they explain pros/cons instead.
2. Visual Comparison
- They create side-by-side 3D renders / mood boards to show your choice vs their suggestion.
- Makes it easier for you to decide with visuals, not just theory.
3. Practical Explanation
- If your choice has drawbacks (e.g., glossy white kitchen = high maintenance), they’ll explain alternatives (matte PU or acrylic).
4. Budget Transparency
- If disagreement is over cost, they should show value vs price clearly.
- Example: “This veneer is ₹300/sq.ft vs laminate at ₹80/sq.ft — both look similar, but veneer ages better.”
5. Flexibility & Boundaries
- For aesthetic choices, they usually bend to your preference (it’s your home).
- For safety/structural issues (like removing a load-bearing wall), they’ll firmly say no.
6. Documented Decisions
- All final choices are recorded in the BOQ & drawings.
- Prevents disputes later (“but I wanted grey, not beige”).
⚠️ Red Flags
- Designer pushes only their style, ignores your input.
- Gets defensive instead of explaining.
- No visuals — only “trust me.”
- Doesn’t update the BOQ/drawings with your changes.
💡 Pro Tip for You
When signing a contract, add a clause like:
- “Final design decisions will be based on mutual agreement, with at least two design options presented in case of disagreements. All changes must be documented in drawings/BOQ.”
👉 Do you want me to draft a “Conflict Resolution Clause” (ready-to-use text) that you can include in your interior design agreement, so you’re protected if disagreements arise?