Kitchen Trends 2025: these design ideas merge sleek design and utilitarian attitude

The Wallpaper* edit of the best kitchen trends for 2025, featuring the chicest, sleekest islands on which to slice and dice

Black grooved kitchen island, one of the Kitchen trends 2025
(Image credit: Photography: Daniela Trost. Interiors: Ian Cibic)

Every year, Wallpaper* searches for the greatest kitchens trends from some of the best specialist brands, blending functionality with sleek design and expert manufacturing. Here, we select the most impactful kitchen design ideas for 2025, from textured surfaces to multifunctional islands and a touch of the unexpected. Discover our kitchen trends, with kitchens that blur the boundaries between a utilitarian approach and aesthetic splendour, with inventive new ways to cook, prep and host.


Ultra-accessorised kitchen islands

Kitchens

(Image credit: Photography: Daniela Trost. Interiors: Ian Cibic)

These voluminous kitchens come with an impressive array of extras, addressing every food prep need in style.

‘Isola’, by Officine Gullo aims to become the epicentre around which family and friends can gather: the five models in the ‘Isola’ collection can be seamlessly integrated into any kitchen project. The wide range of customisable options allows for the creation of dream set-ups with accessories that include pasta cookers, steamers, lava stone barbecues, mirror-finished fry-top plates, coup de feu burners and direct-cooking electric grills.

officinegullo.com

Kitchens

(Image credit: Photography: Daniela Trost. Interiors: Ian Cibic)

‘Proxima’, by Antonio Citterio, for Arclinea is a high-performing stainless steel kitchen defined by its bold handles, which appear along the entire perimeter of the island, allowing for the effortless opening of doors and drawers. The minimalist design, which integrates large American appliances, also aims to encourage proximity, both in terms of easy access to cooking tools, and fostering sociability in the preparation and consumption of foods.

arclinea.com

Grooved cabinet surfaces

Kitchens

(Image credit: Photography: Daniela Trost. Interiors: Ian Cibic)

A new approach to minimalism, these grooved surfaces elevate the most effortless designs with a contemporary aesthetic.

‘Tangram’, by Garcia Cumini Studio features two new innovations by Cesar that add elegantly bold visual effects to the brand’s ‘Tangram’ collection. the ‘Nuances’ worktop showcases a dynamic use of colour that evokes the fluidity of polished and frosted glass, while the oak ‘Groove’ doors feature an irregular pattern of three-dimensional vertical grooves designed to camouflage the joints between cabinets and give the impression of a harmonious, unified surface.
cesar.it

Kitchens

(Image credit: Photography: Daniela Trost. Interiors: Ian Cibic)

This kitchen island, by Carlo Presotto and Andrea Bassanello for Modulnova is clad in Silver Roots marble slabs, with ‘Groove’ walnut doors in a new Moka finish. The island appears to float on a narrow stone base but can still integrate a large appliance such as a dishwasher. Handle-free doors conceal an LED light bar that emphasises the interplay of textures and materials, while a versatile ‘Glass’ door component can be used in various applications, such as bases, wall units and columns.

modulnova.com

Multi-functional layouts

Kitchens

(Image credit: Photography: Daniela Trost. Interiors: Ian Cibic)

‘XO’, by Elisa Ossino, for Boffi is inspired by Luigi Massoni’s classic 1972 ‘Xila’ kitchen (the first model without visible door handles). Ossino’s island is part of a new generation of kitchens as destinations, where prepping, cooking and entertaining all exist within a cohesive design. The XO focuses on geometries that combine precise lines and delicate edges. Hovering only 2cm above the floor, its handle-less doors are framed by a thick Breccia Imperiale stone top and side panels, while a circular solid wood counter, with a matching curving leg, creates a place to congregate.

boffi.com

Invisible tech

Gaggenau

(Image credit: by Gaggenau)

Gaggenau's collection of perfectly balanced designs seamlessly integrate into worktops (so your kitchen can be a rock should you wish it to be). The kitchen authority has distilled the cooktop to its essentials: all that is visible is an LED ‘dot’ in the smart cooking zone and a front-mounted performance knob. Designed to integrate exclusively with the stain- and scratch-resistant Dekton stone countertops, the range is accompanied by a series of removable magnetic protectors for existing cookware, which reduce noise and ensure optimal cooking performance.
gaggenau.com

Informal cooling solutions

Patricia Urquiola, for Signature Kitchen Suite

(Image credit: Patricia Urquiola, for Signature Kitchen Suite)

Designed to be useful throughout the house, these refrigerated drawers, by Patricia Urquiola, for Signature Kitchen Suite, can be used as freestanding or under-counter elements in a kitchen, or to store drinks in a bedroom or beauty products in a bathroom. Featuring strong textures and colours, thanks to Urquiola’s ‘Cimento’ tile cladding, the compact two-drawer module can be combined with matching storage cabinets. As well as the ceramic tiles in five colours, a natural or stained wood finish is also available.

signaturekitchensuite.com

The new marble

David/Nicolas, for Marsotto

(Image credit: David/Nicolas, for Marsotto)

Marble in the kitchen is nothing new, but designers David/Nicolas' approach to the material gives it an unexpected twist. Their ‘Ratio’ kitchen trolley for Marsotto is part of a collection that includes a more traditional kitchen island and plays with the modernist possibilities of the material. Their sculptural bar cart stands out, thanks to its concave modular marble panels and contrasting circular inlays. It is available in various combinations of materials, including Lasa white, Zimbabwe black, Roman and Titanium travertine, and Lava stone, while the inside can be lined in sanded oak, mahogany or ash.

marsotto.com

This article appears in the July 2024 issue of Wallpaper*, available in print on newsstands from 6 June, on the Wallpaper* app on Apple iOS, and to subscribers of Apple News +. Subscribe to Wallpaper* today

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Léa Teuscher is a Sub-Editor at Wallpaper*. A former travel writer and production editor, she joined the magazine over a decade ago, and has been sprucing up copy and attempting to write clever headlines ever since. Having spent her childhood hopping between continents and cultures, she’s a fan of all things travel, art and architecture. She has written three Wallpaper* City Guides on Geneva, Strasbourg and Basel.