Kmart's home section has earned its reputation as the foundation of budget tuckara.com/post/30-day-no-spend-challenge-australia" title="30-Day No Spend Challenge โ The Australian Edition (With a Weekly Plan That Actually Works)">Australian interior styling for very good reason. The range is large, the prices are honest, and โ with the right approach โ the results can look genuinely impressive. These ten hacks are specific, practical and proven: each under $50, each with a clear styling application, and each drawing on what Kmart actually does well versus what it doesn't.
\n1. The Cushion Cover Swap ($8โ$15 each)
\nKmart's cushion insert quality is ordinary. Their cushion covers, particularly the textured and linen-look range, are exceptional for the price. The hack is simple: buy quality foam or feather cushion inserts from IKEA (around $10โ$15 each) once, then replace only the covers as your style evolves. Kmart's covers fit IKEA's standard 50x50cm inserts perfectly. A set of three coordinated Kmart cushion covers transforms a sofa for $24โ$45 โ and when you want a seasonal change, you're only replacing $8 covers, not entire cushions. Currently their ribbed velvet and chunky knit covers are the standout performers for style-to-price ratio.
\n2. The Woven Storage Basket Stack ($19โ$39 each)
\nKmart's seagrass and woven basket range has been consistently strong for several years. The large storage baskets ($29โ$39) work as magazine holders, blanket storage, toy storage, or as pot covers for large indoor plants. Stack two or three different sizes in the same material for an instant styled corner. The key styling tip: fill them fully โ a half-empty basket looks deflated. A large basket filled with a folded throw and a few rolled magazines looks considered and functional simultaneously.
\n3. The Amber Glass Cluster ($6โ$12 per item)
\nKmart's amber glass range โ vases, candle holders, decorative bottles โ is one of the items that consistently surprises people with how good it looks styled. Group three to five pieces of different heights on a coffee table, a shelf, or a window sill. The trick is odd numbers (three or five look better than two or four) and varying heights. Add a tealight or small candle to one or two of them and the cluster looks styled and warm, particularly in the evening. Total cost for a coffee table cluster: $18โ$40.
\n4. The RIBBA + Kmart Art Combination ($4โ$25 per frame)
\nKmart's own frames are hit and miss. IKEA's RIBBA frames are consistently excellent โ but the combination that works best for a gallery wall is RIBBA frames in black or natural, styled on a wall above or behind Kmart accessories. Kmart sells a range of simple art prints and botanical posters ($10โ$20) that fit RIBBA standard sizes, and their clip frames ($6โ$10) allow you to change prints whenever you like. A five-piece gallery wall using this combination โ three RIBBA frames and two Kmart clip frames โ can be assembled for $35โ$60.
\n5. The Jute Rug Layering Trick ($49โ$89)
\nKmart's jute and natural fibre rugs are among their best home products. The hack that elevates them: layer a smaller textured rug (or a sheepskin throw, around $20 from Kmart) on top of the jute base rug. This layering technique is common in styled interiors and looks significantly more expensive than either piece alone. The jute provides natural texture and visual grounding; the top layer adds softness and colour. A 160x230cm jute rug from Kmart plus a small woven rug or sheepskin comes to $69โ$109 โ and looks like a $300 rug combination.
\n6. The Linen Throw Fold ($19โ$29)
\nKmart's cotton and faux linen throws are excellent value and available in their current palette colours. The styling difference between a throw that looks good and one that doesn't is entirely in how it's positioned. Don't drape it symmetrically โ fold it in thirds and drape it casually across one arm and corner of the sofa, or fold it and leave it at one end. Asymmetric placement looks intentional. Smooth placement looks like a hotel room. The throw should look like someone has been using it.
\n7. The Tray Styling Technique ($8โ$15)
\nA tray is one of the most useful budget styling tools because it visually contains and organises a collection of small objects, turning a scattered arrangement into a curated vignette. Kmart's round woven trays and rectangular marble-look trays are both excellent. On a coffee table: tray, one candle or diffuser, one small plant or stem in a bud vase, one decorative object. Three to four items, all within the tray boundary. This simple arrangement on a coffee table elevates the entire room. Total cost including a Kmart tray and accessories: $25โ$45.
\n8. The Arc Floor Lamp ($39โ$69)
\nKmart's arc floor lamp (the tall lamp with the curved stem that positions the light over a seating area) is one of their single best home products. It solves the most common lighting problem in Australian rentals โ a single overhead light that makes the room feel like a waiting room โ by adding a warm light source at human scale. Buy the lamp, then replace the bulb immediately with a 2700K warm white LED. This one change transforms evening atmosphere more than almost any other styling adjustment. At $39โ$69 it's one of the best-value styling investments in any budget home.
\n9. The Bathroom Refresh Kit ($40โ$60 total)
\nKmart's bathroom accessories โ dispensers, cotton bud holders, soap dishes, towel hooks, bath mats โ are all competitively priced and increasingly well-designed. The hack is buying matching pieces in a single finish (all matte black, all white, all brushed gold) to replace the mismatched collection that typically accumulates in bathrooms over time. A matching set of four accessories (dispenser, cotton bud holder, soap dish, ring holder) from Kmart in matte black costs $30โ$40. Add two matching hand towels in a coordinated colour and the bathroom feels styled and intentional for under $60.
\n10. The Styled Shelf Formula ($20โ$50 in props)
\nShelving that looks styled rather than simply full follows a formula: books (stacked horizontally in groups, not all vertical), one organic object (a plant, a piece of driftwood, a ceramic), one tall item (a candlestick, a vase), and one framed photo or print per shelf. Kmart provides excellent shelf props: ceramic vases ($8โ$15), small candle holders ($6โ$10), woven decorative objects ($8โ$12), small pots and saucers for plants ($5โ$8). The formula costs $20โ$50 in Kmart accessories per shelf and delivers results that look significantly more expensive than the component price tags suggest.
\nWhat are the best Kmart home buys in Australia?
\nThe best Kmart home buys in Australia are: textured cushion covers ($8โ$15), woven storage baskets ($19โ$39), amber glass vases and candle holders ($6โ$12), the arc floor lamp ($39โ$69), jute rugs ($49โ$89), cotton and linen throws ($19โ$29), round woven trays ($8โ$15), and bathroom accessory sets in a matching finish ($8โ$15 per piece). These items consistently deliver styling results well above their price point when used correctly.
\nHow do I make my living room look more expensive on a budget in Australia?
\nTo make a living room look more expensive on a budget in Australia: add a jute rug layered with a smaller throw or sheepskin, replace cushion covers with textured Kmart covers in a coherent palette, add a warm arc floor lamp, style the coffee table with a tray containing a candle and one small plant, and hang a gallery wall with consistent frame colours. These five changes can be completed for under $200 from Kmart and IKEA and dramatically transform the room's perceived quality.
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