Collection: Hallway Wallpaper

Stylish hallway wallpapers designed to create welcoming transitions and memorable first impressions.

Showing 518 of 518 products
View:
Sort by:
Style Reset
Topic Reset
Room Reset
Atmosphere Reset
Color Reset
Filter and sort

Filter and sort

Showing 518 of 518 products

Style
Topic
Room
Atmosphere
Color
View:
Showing 518 of 518 products
  • Spring Pink Flowers

    Spring Pink Flowers

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Spotted Seamless Patterns

    Spotted Seamless Patterns

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Sketched Sailboats

    Sketched Sailboats

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Sketched Flowers

    Sketched Flowers

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Sketched Bamboo

    Sketched Bamboo

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Simple Tribal Print

    Simple Tribal Print

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Shabby Ornament

    Shabby Ornament

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Secret Garden

    Secret Garden

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Seagull Yellow

    Seagull Yellow

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Seagull Pink

    Seagull Pink

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Rustic Flowers

    Rustic Flowers

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Romantic Floral Pattern

    Romantic Floral Pattern

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Red Beads in Foliage

    Red Beads in Foliage

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Purple Watercolor

    Purple Watercolor

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Playful Birds

    Playful Birds

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Pink Stripes

    Pink Stripes

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Pink Sky

    Pink Sky

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Pink Floral

    Pink Floral

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Pink Dots

    Pink Dots

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Pink Blossom

    Pink Blossom

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Pink Abstract Texture

    Pink Abstract Texture

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Pink Abstract Roses

    Pink Abstract Roses

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price
  • Peony Drawing

    Peony Drawing

    Regular price
    $9.00
    Sale price
    $9.00
    Regular price

More Patterns

Trending Collections

Industrial

Wallpapers that bring structure, depth, and quiet balance to your space, designed to enhance raw materials, clean lines, and the objects that define everyday life.
check collection

Tropical

Wallpapers with lush character and gentle rhythm, soft botanicals, sun-faded palms, and tropical motifs reimagined for homes that balance warmth, memory, and modern ease.
check collection

Farmhouse

Rustic textures and organic warmth, softened through clean lines and neutral tones, perfect for grounded spaces that feel both natural and intentional
check collection

Coastal

Airy designs inspired by sea-washed mornings, linen textures, and sun-faded hues, bringing the feeling of a calm summer retreat into everyday spaces.
check collection

Hallway wallpaper is one of the highest-impact design decisions in a home — precisely because the hallway is the first interior space anyone encounters, and its character sets the tone for every room beyond it. At Tomono, the hallway collection brings together designs that understand the specific spatial logic of transitional spaces: bold geometric prints that create movement and draw the eye through a corridor, rich botanical wallcoverings that add warmth to narrow or low-lit spaces, and architectural pattern repeats that lend structure and visual height to walls that are often longer than they are wide. The designs work as full treatments or as single-wall statements, depending on the proportions of the space.

The hallway rewards decorative wallpaper in a way that feels different from larger rooms — because the space is experienced in motion rather than at rest, a strong design registers as an impression rather than a sustained presence. This means bolder choices that might feel overwhelming in a living room or bedroom work with genuine confidence in a hallway. A large-scale botanical, a deep tonal geometric, or a richly patterned vintage-inspired wallcovering in a narrow corridor creates drama without demanding prolonged attention. For longer hallways, vertical repeats and patterns with strong upward movement add perceived height and keep the space feeling open rather than tunnel-like.

Peel and Stick Hallway Wallpaper

Every design in this collection is available as peel and stick wallpaper — removable, renter-friendly, and practical for a space that often gets updated more frequently than other rooms in the home. Hallways take more daily contact than most walls, and the clean removal process means refreshing the design as the home evolves carries no risk of wall damage. The adhesive holds well on smooth, primed surfaces and applies cleanly around door frames and architraves.

Is a bold or dramatic wallpaper too much for a hallway?

The hallway is actually one of the rooms where bold design choices are most defensible — and often most effective. Because the space is experienced in passing rather than occupied at length, a pattern that might feel intense in a living room registers as a strong, confident impression in an entrance or corridor. The key constraint is scale relative to the wall dimensions: a very large repeat in a very narrow hallway can feel cropped rather than composed, whereas a medium-scale bold design in a deeper colour works with genuine authority in the same space.

How do I make a narrow or dark hallway feel less oppressive?

Pattern and tone both contribute here, but in different ways. Lighter, warmer tones in a tonal or low-contrast design reflect more available light and make the space feel less enclosed. Vertical repeat patterns — stripes, elongated geometrics, tall botanical stems — draw the eye upward and counter the lateral compression of a narrow corridor. If the hallway is genuinely low-lit, a design with a warm undertone rather than a cool one will feel considerably more inviting, regardless of how pale the shade is.

What wallpaper patterns are most effective in a long, narrow hallway?

Designs with strong vertical movement are the most reliable choice for long, narrow corridors — they add perceived height and counterbalance the tunnel effect of parallel walls. Geometric prints with upward directionality, botanical designs with tall stems and vertical growth, and stripe-adjacent patterns all perform well in this context. Horizontal or very wide repeats are generally less effective in narrow hallways, as they emphasise the width constraint rather than working against it.

Should I wallpaper all four walls of a hallway or just one?

In most hallways, all walls is the stronger choice — unlike living rooms or bedrooms, hallways don't have enough competing visual elements (furniture, art, textiles) to make a single feature wall the obvious focal point. A consistent design across all surfaces creates a cohesive, immersive impression that reads as intentional rather than unfinished. The exception is stairwell walls, where the proportions change significantly and a single dominant surface is sometimes more manageable to execute and more striking in effect.

How does hallway wallpaper interact with the adjoining rooms?

The hallway is a transition rather than a destination, which means its design should connect to adjacent spaces rather than exist in isolation. It doesn't need to match — and often works better when it doesn't — but a shared colour, material tone, or design language between the hallway and the rooms visible from it creates coherence rather than visual interruption. Pulling one colour from the hallway wallpaper into the adjacent living room or kitchen palette, even through accessories, is usually enough to make the connection feel deliberate.

Can I use the same wallpaper in a hallway and a stairwell?

Yes, and it's often the most architecturally confident approach — it treats the entrance sequence as a single continuous space rather than a series of separate decisions. The practical consideration is scale: a pattern that reads well at eye level in a ground-floor hallway may feel very different on the tall, angled walls of a stairwell. Designs with non-directional repeats or strong vertical structure tend to make the transition most successfully, as they work consistently across both the horizontal and angled surfaces of a staircase run.

What finish works best for hallway wallpaper in terms of durability and appearance?

Hallways take more incidental contact than most rooms — coats, bags, hands brushing walls, and frequent passing traffic — which makes surface finish a practical as well as aesthetic consideration. A matte or low-sheen finish reads as more refined and tends to be more forgiving of minor marks and scuffs visually. Designs with pattern, texture, or tonal variation also hide incidental contact better than flat solid-colour surfaces, which show every mark. This is one context where a wallcovering almost always outperforms a painted finish in terms of maintaining its appearance over time.

How do I choose hallway wallpaper that works with the architecture of my home?

The architectural period and detailing of the home provides the strongest direction. A Victorian or Edwardian property with original coving, dado rails, and panelled doors suits botanical, geometric, or vintage-inspired designs that reference the decorative language of the period — though interpreted in a contemporary palette rather than literally reproduced. More recent or minimal architecture reads best alongside graphic geometric prints, tonal concrete or plaster effects, and structured abstract designs. The mistake to avoid in either case is choosing a design that actively conflicts with the architectural period rather than either complementing or consciously subverting it.