Diwali Home Decoration: A Whole-Home Guide

A Diwali home is more than rangoli and diyas. The doorway, the puja space, the living room, the balcony and even the staircase each get a small treatment. None of it has to be elaborate — the festival rewards restraint — but a few well-placed elements can change the feel of an entire flat. This guide walks through what goes where, what to spend on, and what's safe to skip.

Last reviewed on 30 April 2026.

The doorway: the most important square metre

If you only do one thing, do the doorway. It's the part of your home that the festival is named for, the place a visitor sees first, and the spot where most of Diwali's symbolic gestures land. A complete doorway treatment usually has four elements:

The combination has been read the same way for centuries: the home has been cleaned, decorated, lit and made ready, and the goddess of well-being is invited to enter.

Choosing a toran

Three kinds of toran are common at Diwali:

If you have the patience for it, a fresh marigold toran on the day of Lakshmi Puja and a reusable beaded toran for the rest of the five days is a satisfying mix — the day itself feels distinct.

Lanterns: the akash kandil and beyond

Hanging paper lanterns are a Diwali staple, especially in Maharashtra, Goa and the western states. The classic Maharashtrian akash kandil — literally "sky lamp" — is a star-shaped paper lantern, usually with five or six points, lit from within by a small electric bulb. They hang from balconies, courtyard ceilings and front porches from the start of the festival until Tulsi Vivah a couple of weeks later.

Other popular lanterns include:

If you live in an apartment with a balcony, a single large akash kandil or jali lantern is usually more striking than several smaller ones. Hang it where it can be seen from the street.

Floral arrangements

Flowers are inseparable from Diwali decoration. Three of the most-used arrangements:

Marigold garlands

The festival's signature flower. Marigolds (genda or zendu) are bright, durable and inexpensive. Use them as:

Urli with floating diyas

An urli is a wide, shallow brass or copper bowl, traditionally used in Kerala for cooking. As Diwali decoration, fill an urli with water, scatter marigold and rose petals on the surface, and float two or three small diyas on top. Place it at the entrance of the home, on the dining table, or at the centre of the puja space. It's one of the few decorative elements that's beautiful at any scale — the same idea works in a 10cm bowl or a 60cm one.

Flower-and-leaf wall hangings

For the puja space, a fresh garland draped along the top of the puja shelf or platform creates a frame for the deities. Mango leaves alone (without flowers) are also traditional and last longer than full floral garlands.

The puja space

Whether your home has a dedicated puja room, a shelf in the kitchen or a small corner of the living room, the same principles apply during Diwali:

For the actual sequence of the ritual on Lakshmi Puja night, see our Lakshmi Puja step-by-step guide. For the lamps themselves — oil, wick, placement and safety — the diyas guide goes into detail.

Living room and dining room

The living room is where most visitors will sit during the festival evenings. A few small touches go a long way:

For the dining table, a runner of marigolds (knotted strands laid down the centre), small diyas at the corners and brass tableware turn an ordinary meal into a festival one without much effort.

Balcony and outdoor spaces

From the street, your balcony is the most visible part of your home during Diwali. Three layered elements work well:

For safety, use battery-operated diyas in places where wind regularly blows out flames or where a falling lamp could land on flammable material. Keep all flame sources well clear of curtains and dry décor.

Staircases, corridors and shared spaces

If you live in an apartment building, the corridor outside your flat and the shared staircase are good places for restrained decoration:

Coordinating with neighbours on a building-wide diya lighting on Lakshmi Puja night is unexpectedly satisfying — if every flat puts diyas at its threshold at the same hour, the whole building reads as the festival.

A simple Diwali decoration plan, by budget

ApproachDoorwayLiving spaceBalcony
Minimal Fresh marigold toran, two clay diyas, simple powder rangoli. Five clay diyas grouped on a tray; one urli with petals. Single row of clay diyas along the rim.
Modest Marigold toran, charan footprints, larger rangoli, four clay diyas. Garland over the puja shelf, urli with floating diyas, indoor light string. Diyas plus one akash kandil or paper lantern.
Elaborate Both fresh and reusable torans, multi-colour rangoli, six diyas, jali lantern at threshold. Multiple urlis, brass standing lamps, floor cushions, full marigold runner on dining table. Akash kandil plus jali lanterns plus light strings along the railing.

Common mistakes

After the festival

Take down decorations gradually rather than all at once. The akash kandil traditionally stays up until Tulsi Vivah, about two weeks after Diwali. Clay diyas can be kept for next year if undamaged; broken ones can be returned to the soil — the original point of using fired earth was that it eventually goes back. Fresh garlands should be composted rather than thrown out with general waste. Beaded torans, brass lamps and lanterns go back into storage labelled by category, which makes setup easier the following year.

For the symbolic side of all this — why the doorway matters, what the lamps mean, where the rituals come from — see our page on Diwali traditions and significance. For lower-impact options, including reusable décor and natural rangoli colours, see eco-friendly Diwali.