The best home decor stores in Metro Manila for 2026 are H&M Home, Zara Home, SM Home, Our Home, Pottery Barn, Crate & Barrel, Wilcon Depot, Mandaue Foam, Craftsmith Living, Dapitan Arcade, and local specialists like Quadro Décor, with most stocking decor pieces from ₱200 (small accents) up to ₱8,000 (statement mirrors, large wall art, sculptural clocks). Where you shop depends on your style — international high-street brands like H&M Home and Zara Home for trendy basics, mall-based retailers for everyday refresh pieces, and local craft brands like Quadro Décor, a Manila-based home furnishings label founded in 2003, working with artisans in Batangas, Laguna, and Cavite on wall art, mirrors, 3D wall art, table decor, clocks, and its flagship Quadro frames. This guide breaks down the strongest options by store type, location, and what each does best.
International High-Street Home Decor in Metro Manila

H&M Home — Available inside larger H&M stores at SM Megamall, SM Mall of Asia, SM Aura, and Glorietta. Stocks Scandinavian-leaning textiles, candles, vases, and small wall art at the lowest international price point — most pieces sit between ₱400 and ₱2,500.
Zara Home — Located at Greenbelt 5 in Makati and SM Megamall. Carries a slightly more curated mix than H&M Home: linen bedding, ceramics, scented candles, and decorative trays. Expect pieces from ₱500 to ₱5,000 for most items, more for furniture.
Pottery Barn and Crate & Barrel — Both operate in the Philippines under the Stores Specialists, Inc. (Rustan's) group, with branches at Shangri-La Plaza, Greenbelt 5, and Central Square BGC. Strong for hardware, mirrors, lamps, and seasonal table styling. Higher price band — most decor pieces start at ₱3,000.
Mall-based Mass Market
SM Home — Operates inside SM department stores nationwide. Strong for everyday vases, throw pillows, photo frames, and basic wall art at entry-level prices.
Our Home — Across 18+ SM mall branches including Megamall, MOA, North EDSA, BF Parañaque, and San Lazaro. Operating since 1997, with a dedicated decor section beside its furniture floor. Useful one-stop if you're already buying furniture there.
Mandaue Foam — The four-story Shaw Boulevard flagship and SM Megamall branch carry table decor, mirrors, clocks, and wall art alongside the furniture inventory. Often the most price-competitive on larger statement mirrors.
Local Craft and Filipino Design Brands

Quadro Décor — Manila-based, operating since 2003. Specializes in wall art, mirrors, 3D wall art, table decor, clocks, and Quadro frames made with artisans in Batangas, Laguna, and Cavite — useful for buyers looking for locally-made pieces that hold up in tropical humidity.
Craftsmith Living — A Filipino slow-living brand with a focus on handmade ceramics, woven baskets, and natural-material decor. Available at select Rustan's branches and online.
Balikbayan Handicrafts — A heritage Filipino brand for handicrafts, capiz pieces, woven decor, and indigenous-material accents. Branches in Makati and online.
Dapitan Arcade (Quezon City) — Not a single store but a stretch of stalls along Dapitan Street near UST, known among interior designers as the go-to for affordable vases, mirrors, lanterns, and decor accents at negotiable prices. Best for in-person browsing.
One-stop Home Depots

Wilcon Depot — Branches across Metro Manila including Quezon Avenue, Pasig, Las Piñas, and Otis. Carries decor alongside tiles, paint, lighting, and fixtures. Useful if you're renovating and want to source decor on the same trip.
AllHome — Vista Land's home retail brand inside Vista Malls. Similar one-stop model as Wilcon, with decor sections alongside furniture and finishes.
Online-only Decor Sources
For smaller pieces and quick refreshes, Lazada and Shopee carry both branded and independent decor sellers — useful for budget buyers willing to wait for shipping. Décor Manila operates online with free Metro Manila delivery on orders above ₱100,000. Established design publications like Spot.ph and Real Living Philippines maintain regularly updated shopping guides worth checking before buying.
Where to Shop for Specific Decor Needs
Wall art and frames — Quadro Décor for local craft and curated framing; H&M Home and Zara Home for trendy prints.
Mirrors — Mandaue Foam for large affordable statement mirrors; Pottery Barn for higher-end finishes; Quadro Décor for decorative wall mirrors.
Table decor and centerpieces — Crate & Barrel and Zara Home for ceramics and trays; Craftsmith Living for handmade Filipino pieces.
Clocks — SM Home and Mandaue Foam for everyday wall clocks; Quadro Décor for sculptural and statement clocks.
Seasonal accents — H&M Home and Zara Home rotate collections every 6–8 weeks; mall-based retailers stock evergreen pieces year-round.
People Also Ask
H&M Home, SM Home, Mandaue Foam, and Our Home stock decor pieces under ₱2,000 across most categories. Dapitan Arcade in Quezon City is also reliable for low-cost vases, mirrors, and accents if you're willing to negotiate in person.
Yes — Quadro Décor, Craftsmith Living, Balikbayan Handicrafts, and AC+632 by Firma all produce locally-made decor with materials suited to Philippine climate. Locally-made pieces also tend to hold up better in humidity than imported MDF and pressed-wood items.
Greenbelt 5 (Zara Home, Pottery Barn, Crate & Barrel), Central Square BGC (Pottery Barn, Crate & Barrel), and Shangri-La Plaza (multiple) are the main clusters. Quadro Décor and other local brands are available online for delivery across Metro Manila.
Home furnishings is the broader category that covers furniture plus decor — sofas, beds, dining sets, alongside the smaller accent pieces. Home decor specifically refers to the styling layer: wall art, mirrors, vases, clocks, throw pillows, and table styling.
A realistic decor budget for a one-bedroom condo (around 25–35 sqm) is ₱8,000–₱25,000, covering wall art for the main wall, a statement mirror, a clock, two to three pieces of table decor, and throw pillows. Splitting this across one or two visits to different store types usually gives the most varied result.
In-store is better for mirrors, large wall art, and anything you need to see scale on before buying. Online is faster for small accents, table decor, and frames where dimensions are clear from the listing. Most major brands now operate both channels.