Why You Need an Interior Designer and When to Hire One

5 mins read

My name is Elena Zakadychnaya, and I'm an interior designer. In this article I want to walk through what an interior designer actually does, when it makes sense to bring one in, and whether you can realistically skip it altogether.

What an interior designer actually does

An interior designer is not someone who makes pretty mood boards. First and foremost, they are a specialist in space planning, ergonomics, and functionality — someone who thinks about how you will actually live inside the apartment, not just how it looks in a render.

The same 50 sq.m apartment can be perfect for a single person and completely impractical for a family with children. The difference lies entirely in how the space is organised.

When to bring in a designer

Before you buy

Yes, it makes sense to consult a designer before you sign anything. They can tell you whether the layout works for the way you live, assess what replanning is realistically possible, and sketch out a few spatial options. This significantly reduces the risk of buying an apartment that looks good on paper but turns out to be awkward to live in. Questions about the neighbourhood, price per square metre, and investment potential are the realtor's job — but whether the space actually works for you is the designer's territory.

Layout planning

This is the stage where cutting corners is a mistake. Layout planning covers furniture placement, zoning, traffic flow, and storage. It's where the comfort of your daily life is decided, and it's where errors are the most expensive to correct later.

Design concept and visualisation

Once the layout is sorted, the visual side follows: style, colours, materials, furniture selection, lighting, 3D renders. This is the stage where you see — for the first time — what the finished apartment will actually look like. If you want to stop here and manage the rest yourself, that's a reasonable option.

Electrical and plumbing plans

This is probably the most underestimated stage of any renovation. A designer works out where every socket goes (including high-load circuits for hobs and ovens), where internet and TV points land, how lighting scenes are set up, which switches are two-way, and where water and drainage connections are positioned. All of this gets drawn up as clear, buildable plans. Without them, builders do what they're used to — and fixing it afterwards costs far more than getting it right the first time.

Full design project

A full project covers everything: layout, electrical and plumbing, floor and ceiling plans, wall finishes, tile layouts, room elevations, and technical details. This becomes essential when the interior involves decorative panels, mouldings, complex finishes, or large-format tile. Without proper drawings, these are exactly where expensive mistakes happen.

Can you manage without a designer?

You can — if the renovation is straightforward, you have the time, a reliable foreman, and the willingness to stay on top of every detail yourself. But in practice, a designer rarely adds to the budget; they more often protect it. The savings come from avoiding mistakes that would otherwise need to be corrected at extra cost.

Beyond the project itself, a designer can take on procurement — sourcing and ordering all materials, furniture, and lighting — and site supervision, which means monitoring the build and acting as the point of contact with your construction team. This is essentially a turnkey service: you get a finished interior with minimal involvement on your end.

Why this matters when buying in Batumi

If you're buying property in Batumi — whether to live in or rent out — thoughtful interior design has a direct effect on living comfort, rental yield, and resale value. Apartments in Batumi's new developments are often compact with non-standard layouts that need a considered approach to work well. Getting the design right from the start can meaningfully improve both the experience of living there and the returns you see from it.

The bottom line

An interior designer is not about making things look beautiful — it's about making them work well, without wasted money. The earlier you bring one in, the more you save.

This material is informational and is not legal, tax or investment advice. Consult licensed professionals in Georgia before making decisions.

Why You Need an Interior Designer and When to Hire One