There’s a very specific kind of stress that comes with being invited to a housewarming party. It’s not the same as birthday stress, where you at least have a general idea of what the person likes. A housewarming is somehow harder. You’re being asked to give something that fits their new home — a space you probably haven’t even seen yet — in a way that feels thoughtful rather than random. And because everyone else is probably also going to bring wine or a candle, you want to do something that actually stands out.
This guide exists to solve that exact problem. We’ve pulled together more than 100 gift ideas across every budget, personality type, and occasion. Whether you’re shopping for a coworker’s apartment or your best friend’s first house, there’s something here that’ll actually work. And at the end, we’ll cover a simple trick that turns even a modest gift into something the new homeowner genuinely remembers.
Why Housewarming Gifts Are Actually Tricky (And How to Get Them Right)
The challenge with housewarming gifts is that they sit in a weird middle zone. They’re not quite as personal as a birthday gift, but they’re also not as functional as a wedding registry item. You’re not usually going to find a housewarming registry with a neat list of exactly what someone needs. So you’re left guessing — and guessing about someone’s home tastes is genuinely hard.
There’s also the timing thing. The housewarming period is one of the most chaotic and cash-draining moments in a person’s life. They’ve just handed over a deposit, paid movers, possibly bought furniture, and are suddenly realizing that a new home comes with twenty small purchases they never anticipated — a toilet brush, a doormat, new curtain rods because the old ones don’t fit. In that context, something genuinely useful can mean more than something beautiful.
But that’s not always true either. Sometimes people are moving somewhere they’ve already perfectly furnished in their head. They’re not short on things — they’re short on the feeling that their new home has been celebrated. And that’s where a really memorable gift gets its power.
So the real question to ask yourself before you start shopping isn’t “what do homeowners need?” It’s two questions:
- How well do I know this person?
- Are they practical or sentimental?
Once you have a rough answer to both, the rest of this guide will take you straight to the right section. But if you’re genuinely not sure, start with the practical gifts section — you really can’t go wrong there, and the best practical gifts look just as thoughtful as sentimental ones.
How Much Should You Actually Spend?
This is probably the most Googled housewarming question of all, and the honest answer is: it depends on the relationship, not the occasion.
Here’s a rough guide that most people follow, though obviously these are flexible:
- Coworker or acquaintance: $20 to $40
- Friend you see occasionally: $30 to $60
- Close friend: $50 to $100
- Best friend or family member: $75 to $150 or more
- Group gift: Pool contributions and aim for something they’d never buy themselves
One thing worth knowing: housewarming gifts are generally less expensive than wedding gifts. You’re not replacing a registry — you’re celebrating a milestone. A thoughtful $35 gift given with genuine care will almost always land better than an expensive one that feels generic.
The other thing that matters here is how long the relationship is going to last. If this is a coworker you see every day, it’s worth being generous. If it’s a neighbor you’re meeting for the first time at the party, a nice $25 plant is absolutely appropriate.
Gifts Under $30 — Small but Genuinely Thoughtful
Budget gifting gets a bad reputation, but some of the most appreciated housewarming presents don’t cost much at all. The key is to choose something that feels considered rather than grabbed from a shelf at the last minute.
Kitchen and Pantry
- A quality olive oil: A really good bottle of extra virgin olive oil — something from a specialty shop, not a supermarket brand — is both practical and a little luxurious. It’s something people use every day but rarely splurge on for themselves.
- Finishing salt set: A small collection of artisan salts (fleur de sel, smoked salt, black lava salt) looks impressive, costs very little, and gets used for years. It’s the kind of thing a home cook will genuinely love.
- Spice bundle: A curated collection of high-quality spices from a specialty store. Far more thoughtful than whatever’s in the supermarket spice aisle.
- A nice wooden spoon: This sounds simple, but a hand-crafted wooden spoon or spatula from a small maker is something people reach for every single day. It’s practical and beautiful at the same time.
- Local honey: If you live somewhere with interesting local producers, a jar of local honey is an excellent housewarming gift. It’s edible, it’s personal to where you live, and it has that “I actually thought about this” quality.
- A set of nice dish towels: This sounds boring until you realize how fast new homeowners go through dish towels. A set of quality linen or cotton ones in a neutral color is always welcome.
Home and Ambiance
- A potted succulent or small plant: Plants are the single most universally appropriate housewarming gift. A succulent is perfect because it’s nearly impossible to kill, looks great in any home, and feels alive in a way that says “welcome to your new space.”
- Seed packets and a small planter: For someone who has a garden or balcony, a set of herb seeds with a small terracotta pot is sweet and inexpensive. They’ll think of you every time they snip herbs into dinner.
- A scented candle from a reputable brand: Not just any candle — find a brand with interesting, non-generic scents. Smell is deeply tied to memory, so a great candle can genuinely shape how someone feels about their new home for years.
- A stylish doormat: A fun or beautiful doormat might be the most useful thing you can bring to a housewarming. Chances are the old one didn’t survive the move, and buying one is always at the bottom of the priority list.
- A set of pretty matchboxes or a matchstick holder: If they’re a candle person, this is perfect. Fireplace matches in a beautiful container look great displayed on a shelf.
Food and Drink
- A bottle of wine: This is still one of the most acceptable housewarming gifts if you put any thought into the selection. Don’t grab the cheapest bottle. Find a local winery, or ask a wine shop for a recommendation around your budget.
- Craft beer or specialty spirits: For non-wine drinkers, a selection of local craft beers or a small bottle of something unusual (like a flavored gin or a mezcal) feels more considered than a standard bottle of whiskey.
- A gift basket of local specialty foods: Even a small curated basket — some local crackers, a jar of jam, a small cheese — feels personal and generous without costing much.
The Sweet Spot: Gifts Between $30 and $75
This is where most people land, and honestly, the $30 to $75 range is where you have the most room to give something genuinely memorable. You have enough budget to choose something with real quality, but the amount isn’t so large that it creates social pressure.
Kitchen
- A quality cutting board: A beautiful end-grain or edge-grain wooden cutting board is one of those things people use constantly and never buy for themselves. Look for something made by a small craftsperson — you can often find them on Etsy or at local markets for under $70.
- Cast iron skillet: A 10-inch Lodge cast iron skillet costs around $30 to $40 and will genuinely last a lifetime. It’s the kind of gift that gets used for decades and eventually gets handed down.
- A French press or pour-over coffee set: For coffee people, this is a game changer. A simple glass French press and a bag of specialty coffee beans is a complete, beautiful gift that costs under $50.
- An electric kettle in a nice color: Modern electric kettles are both functional and decorative. One in a matte black or sage green can actually make a kitchen counter look better.
- Meal kit gift card: A gift card for two or three meals from a meal kit service is perfect for new homeowners who are too busy unpacking to cook. It gives them a few nights off without the cost or the guilt of ordering delivery.
- A nice set of kitchen shears: Sounds mundane. Is actually something every home cook uses all the time and often doesn’t own a quality pair of.
Home Décor and Comfort
- A quality throw blanket: A cozy throw blanket in a neutral color is one of the safest comfort gifts you can give. Choose something with genuine texture — linen, chunky knit, or waffle weave. It ends up on the couch every single day.
- A beautiful vase: A simple, quality ceramic vase in a neutral tone is something most homes can use and few people buy for themselves. It becomes a permanent fixture.
- Scented diffuser with quality oils: A reed diffuser or ultrasonic diffuser with a set of essential oils is a step up from a candle — it’s more sustained, and it fills a room differently. Make sure to choose fresh or clean scents rather than overpowering floral ones.
- A framed botanical or art print: Wall art is always needed in a new home. A simple, quality print in a nice frame — botanical illustrations, abstract art, or a city map of their hometown — goes a long way. Sites like Society6 or Etsy have thousands of options.
- Cozy slipper set: A pair of quality slippers — not the cheap foam kind, but something with actual cushioning and a hard sole — is surprisingly thoughtful. New homeowners spend a lot of time walking around their new place figuring it out.
Practical but Special
- A multi-tool or quality screwdriver set: Moving into a new home means putting up shelves, hanging pictures, tightening loose handles, and a thousand other small jobs. A quality screwdriver set or multi-tool is one of the most genuinely useful things you can bring.
- Smart plug or smart bulbs starter kit: These are inexpensive but feel high-tech and fun. A few smart bulbs or a smart plug gives them their first taste of home automation without the complexity.
- Quality doorbell or small security camera: This is especially thoughtful for someone buying their first home — they’re now suddenly responsible for their own security and may not have thought this through yet.
- A nice address stamp or house number plaque: A custom address stamp (for labeling packages and mail) or a beautiful house number plaque is something unique. It’s practical, it’s personalized, and it’s definitely not what everyone else is bringing.
Gifts from $75 to $150 — When You Really Want to Impress
In this range, you’re getting into territory where the gift itself becomes a statement. These are for close friends, family members, or situations where you really want the gift to carry some weight. You have options that feel genuinely generous without tipping into over-the-top territory.
- A Dutch oven: A quality enameled cast iron Dutch oven — think Lodge, Cuisinart, or a splurge on Le Creuset if you stretch slightly beyond — is a kitchen gift that will be used forever. It’s the kind of thing people put on wishlists and never actually buy.
- An Instant Pot or air fryer: Both of these are kitchen appliances that new homeowners genuinely reach for, especially during the unpacking chaos when nobody wants to cook from scratch. They’re practical and feel generous.
- A high-quality water filter pitcher: This is an unexpectedly great gift. A Brita or Berkey filter pitcher is something new homeowners quickly realize they need, depending on their local water quality, and it’s not the first thing anyone buys.
- A luxury candle set from a premium brand: If you want to go the ambiance route but make it feel genuinely upscale, a set from a brand like Diptyque, Maison Margiela, or Boy Smells makes a strong impression without being impractical.
- A wine or beverage fridge: This is the kind of gift that makes someone say “I would never have bought this for myself.” A small countertop wine or beverage fridge is aspirational but not completely frivolous — people use them all the time once they have one.
- Quality bed sheets: This feels personal, but good sheets are genuinely transformative. Once you’ve slept on high-quality linen or 600-thread-count cotton, you can’t go back. It’s a gift people are grateful for every single night.
- An experience voucher: A gift card to a nice local restaurant, a spa, or a cooking class is perfect for a couple settling into a new home. The gift isn’t about the home at all — it’s about giving them a night off from the chaos of moving.
- A curated gift box subscription: Services like Mouth, Goldbelly, or local artisan subscription boxes send a curated collection of local foods every month. A three-month subscription gives them a recurring reminder of your gift long after the party is over.
- Outdoor string lights: If they have a patio, balcony, or backyard, a set of warm outdoor string lights instantly transforms a space. They’re affordable but feel like a real upgrade.
- A Bluetooth speaker: A quality portable Bluetooth speaker is used constantly in a new home — in the kitchen while cooking, in the bathroom, on the patio. Mid-range options from JBL or Marshall are excellent in this price range.
Luxury Housewarming Gifts — When Budget Isn’t the Point
For very close family or a special occasion — like when someone has bought their dream home after years of saving, or when you’re collaborating with others on a group gift — it’s worth knowing what’s in the luxury tier. These aren’t everyday gifts, but they’re the ones that people remember for a very long time.
- Le Creuset Dutch oven: At $300 to $400, a Le Creuset in a signature color is the king of housewarming gifts. It’s beautiful, it lasts literally forever, and it sits on the stove as a piece of décor. People who receive one talk about it for years.
- A custom home portrait: A commissioned illustration or watercolor painting of their new home is one of the most thoughtful things you can give. Artists on Etsy will paint from a photograph for $100 to $300 depending on detail and size. It becomes an heirloom.
- A robot vacuum: Roomba changed a lot of people’s daily lives, and gifting one to a new homeowner is genuinely life-improving. They’re expensive enough that most people don’t buy them for themselves, but once you have one, there’s no going back.
- An espresso machine: For coffee lovers, a mid-to-high-end espresso machine is a dream gift. Brands like Breville make excellent machines in the $250 to $500 range that produce genuinely great espresso at home.
- A custom neighborhood map print (framed and large): A large, beautifully framed map of their new neighborhood or city, personalized with their address marked, is stunning wall art. Companies like Mapiful or Printmaps let you customize exactly what it looks like.
- Smart home starter kit: A curated set of smart home devices — smart thermostat, smart lights, a video doorbell — sets them up with a genuinely connected home. This is especially great as a group gift.
- A high-end cheese or charcuterie board setup: A beautiful marble or acacia wood board with a set of quality cheese knives, paired with a selection of specialty cheeses and cured meats, makes a stunning first impression at a housewarming party and can be used long after.
- A furniture gift card: If you know they need something specific but you don’t want to guess on taste, a generous gift card to a quality furniture store (not IKEA, but something slightly elevated — West Elm, Article, Crate & Barrel) lets them choose what actually fits their space.
Gifts by Personality Type (The Real Shortcut)
The fastest way to land a great housewarming gift isn’t to browse every option — it’s to think about the person and match the gift to who they actually are. Here’s a rough breakdown that skips all the guesswork.
The Home Chef
If they cook — really cook, not just warm things up — go straight to the kitchen. A Dutch oven, a carbon steel pan, a quality knife, a beautiful wooden cutting board, a pasta maker, or a kitchen scale. Anything that upgrades the cooking process. If you’re not sure what they already have, a gift card to a specialty kitchen store (Williams Sonoma, Sur La Table) is absolutely appropriate.
The Plant Parent
This person will love a beautiful potted plant — not a tiny succulent but something that makes a statement. A fiddle leaf fig, a monstera, a rubber tree, or a peace lily. Pair it with a beautiful ceramic pot and some quality potting mix. You can also add a book on plant care, which doubles the gift.
The Tech Enthusiast
Smart home gadgets are perfect here. A smart plug, smart bulbs, a smart speaker, a video doorbell, or a robot vacuum. If you have a bigger budget, consider a smart thermostat like a Nest or Ecobee — it saves money and they’ll think about your gift every time they set the temperature.
The Entertainer
Someone who loves having people over will appreciate anything that helps them host. A beautiful set of wine glasses, a cocktail-making set, a large charcuterie board and cheese knife set, a quality ice bucket, or outdoor string lights. Think about what makes a home feel like a great place to gather.
The Minimalist
The hardest person to shop for at a housewarming. They don’t want clutter, so avoid décor. Instead, go for consumables — high-quality food, specialty coffee, beautiful candles, or an experience (a restaurant gift card, a museum membership). You could also go for something they need but wouldn’t splurge on: very good sheets, a quality knife, or a fancy hand soap and lotion set.
The Outdoorsy Type
If they have a garden, balcony, or yard, outdoor gifts are perfect. Outdoor string lights, a set of quality gardening tools, a bird feeder and seed, an outdoor lantern, a beautiful set of herb seeds and planters, or a hammock. The more it helps them enjoy their outdoor space, the better.
The Reader or Creative
A stack of beautiful books — coffee table books on architecture, photography, travel, or art — is one of the best gifts you can give a reader or creative person. They become décor and entertainment at the same time. Add a nice bookmark or a beautiful journal and you’ve got a complete gift.
The Wellness Devotee
Think aromatherapy, yoga supplies, a quality essential oil diffuser, a meditation app subscription, bath salts and a beautiful tray, a silk eye mask, or a luxurious robe. Home is where wellness routines happen, so anything that makes their home feel more like a sanctuary will land well.
Housewarming Gifts for Couples
Buying for a couple is a slightly different calculation — you want something they’ll both actually enjoy, not a gift that clearly appeals to one person and gets politely used by the other. Here are the ideas that tend to work best for couples specifically.
- A wine or cocktail experience: A wine tasting class, a cocktail-making workshop, or a cooking class for two gives them an experience to share. It’s off the beaten path of regular housewarming gifts and creates a memory rather than just an object.
- A high-quality cast iron pan: Cast iron is romantic in the way that it’s built to be passed down. A good pan represents shared meals for decades.
- A board game collection: For couples who like game nights, a collection of modern board games — Catan, Ticket to Ride, Codenames, or Pandemic — is a gift that will bring friends over repeatedly.
- A streaming service subscription: A year of a streaming service or a shared music subscription is both practical and genuinely appreciated. It’s something they’ll use every single week.
- A personalized video greeting from friends and family: One of the most emotionally impactful things you can give a couple at a housewarming is a video compilation of the people who love them most — short clips from their parents, friends, siblings — all stitched together as a celebration of their new home. Services like MessageAR let you collect and share video greetings in a way that they can actually display and replay. This works especially well at the housewarming party itself — play it on the TV and watch the room light up.
- A quality throw and matching pillow covers: Something that makes their couch feel more curated. Choose neutral tones and quality material — it’s the kind of gift that gets used in shared spaces daily.
- A couples’ spa gift card: Moving into a new home is stressful. A spa day for two is a thoughtful acknowledgment that they’ve been through a lot and deserve some rest.
- A good cheese and wine delivery box: Companies like Murray’s Cheese or Preserve will ship a curated selection of artisan cheeses with pairing notes. It arrives as a full evening experience in a box.
First Home Gifts — Because This One Really Matters
Buying a first home is different from any other move. It’s a milestone that usually comes after years of saving, paperwork, anxiety, and negotiation. The person who’s just closed on their first property isn’t just moving — they’re crossing into a completely different chapter of their life. Your gift can acknowledge that.
For a first home specifically, practical gifts tend to land especially well. Here’s why: first-time homeowners are often coming from rentals, which means they never had to buy half the things a house requires. Suddenly, they own a lawn and need tools. They have a garage and no shelving. The hot water heater made a strange noise and they don’t own a single wrench.
The Best Practical First Home Gifts
- A complete home toolkit: Not a cheap set — a genuinely quality collection of tools in a nice case. Hammer, screwdrivers (flat and Phillips), a level, pliers, a tape measure, hex keys, and a cordless drill. This is the gift that keeps giving every single week.
- A home maintenance book: Books like “The Complete Guide to Home Repair” or “How Your House Works” are surprisingly beloved first-home gifts. First-time homeowners are constantly confronting things they don’t understand about their house.
- A smart smoke and carbon monoxide detector: Nest Protect costs around $100 and replaces the basic detectors that come with most homes. It connects to a phone, speaks out loud in an emergency, and is something first-time owners never think to upgrade.
- A great set of cleaning supplies: Method, Grove Collective, or a curated basket of quality cleaning products for the kitchen, bathroom, and floors is practical in a way that genuinely helps during the chaos of moving in.
- A home warranty or inspection gift certificate: Some companies allow you to gift a home inspection or a first year of a home warranty plan. For someone who’s new to homeownership, this kind of protection is extremely valuable and not something they’d typically receive as a gift.
- A subscription to a home repair service: Services that connect homeowners with vetted tradespeople — like Angi or TaskRabbit gift cards — are exactly what first-time owners need when things inevitably go wrong.
The Best Sentimental First Home Gifts
- A custom illustration of their new home: This is one of the most beloved housewarming gifts for a first home. Commission an artist to illustrate their house and frame it beautifully. It’s something that can hang in the same house for thirty years.
- A “first home” keepsake kit: Some stationery companies sell kits that include a place to record the purchase date, the address, the key (or a copy of it), and notes about the home. It’s nostalgic in the best way.
- A handwritten letter and a bottle of something special: Don’t underestimate the power of writing. A heartfelt, personal letter celebrating what this milestone means — tucked inside a beautiful card with a special bottle of wine or champagne — is sometimes the most moving thing in the room.
Personalized Housewarming Gifts That Actually Land
Personalization is where gifts go from “appreciated” to “unforgettable.” The difference is that the person can’t receive the same gift from anyone else. It was made specifically for them, for this house, at this moment. That’s hard to beat.
Here are personalized gift ideas that actually work — as in, they’re not just personalized for the sake of it, but in a way where the customization genuinely adds meaning:
- A custom address stamp: A self-inking rubber stamp with their new address is something they’ll actually use — for mailing letters, labeling packages, marking personal items. It’s small, practical, and surprisingly fun. Usually costs $20 to $35.
- A personalized house portrait: As mentioned above — a commissioned illustration of their home is a long-term keepsake and a statement gift. Artists on Etsy offer these in a range of styles (watercolor, pencil sketch, flat graphic) at various price points.
- A custom street map print: A map centered on their new address, printed beautifully in their color scheme and framed. Companies like Mapiful and Maptote make stunning versions of these that work as actual art.
- Personalized cutting board or serving board: An engraved wooden cutting board with their name, initials, or address is a practical kitchen item that becomes a small piece of décor. Quality ones start around $40.
- Custom embroidered towels or napkins: Their initials embroidered on quality linen kitchen towels or cloth napkins elevates something mundane into something monogrammed and special.
- A personalized family sign or print: A word art piece featuring their family name and the year they moved in — something typographic and framed — has become a very popular first-home gift. Simple and meaningful.
- A custom recipe book: If you’re a close friend or family member, compile a collection of their favorite recipes — or recipes from family members and friends — into a printed and bound book. It’s a labor of love that becomes an heirloom.
- A shared video message from their people: For an emotional, genuinely unforgettable gift, a video message is in a category of its own. When friends, family, and loved ones each record a short clip celebrating the new home — and those clips are compiled and shared — it creates something the homeowner will want to watch again and again. With MessageAR, you can collect multiple video greetings and send them in a way that’s easy to display or share at the party itself. It’s the kind of housewarming gift that makes people cry in the best possible way.
Surprisingly Practical Gifts (That Look Thoughtful Too)
The best practical gifts are the ones that don’t look like they came from a hardware store. There’s a whole category of things new homeowners need — genuinely need, not just vaguely would enjoy — that can be packaged and presented as genuinely thoughtful gifts. These are the ones people remember because they use them every single day.
- A quality toilet brush: This sounds like a joke. It isn’t. New homeowners often forget to buy one, or they buy a terrible one. A quality one from a design-forward brand (like Joseph Joseph) is something they’ll use every week and actually appreciate. Give it in a gift bag with something else if you want to soften the presentation.
- A set of matching hangers: This is another surprisingly impactful gift. Moving into a new home is the perfect moment to finally upgrade to matching slim velvet hangers. A set of 50 makes a real difference to how a closet looks.
- A good flashlight: Every home needs one. Most people don’t own a quality one until a power outage reminds them. A rechargeable LED flashlight is practical, inexpensive, and one of those things they’ll genuinely thank you for the first time the power goes out.
- A first aid kit: Not a complete medical supply, but a well-stocked, nicely packaged first aid kit. There’s something thoughtful about wanting someone to be safe in their new home.
- A set of cable organizers and power strip: For new homeowners, the number of cables and plugs multiplies rapidly. A set of quality cable organizers and a surge-protected power strip is more appreciated than it sounds.
- Command strips and hooks: This is a genuinely brilliant housewarming gift. New homeowners spend the first weeks staring at bare walls wondering how to hang things without making holes. A variety pack of Command strips and hooks solves this completely and is one of the first things they’ll reach for.
- A labeling machine: For the organized type, a Brother P-Touch or similar label maker is something they’ll use constantly — in the pantry, the garage, the filing system — and would never buy for themselves.
- A quality sponge and soap dispenser set: A beautiful pump soap dispenser and matching dish brush, in ceramic or stainless steel, turns the kitchen sink into something that looks deliberately styled. Small detail, big impact.
- A water leak detector: This is a gift that could literally save their home from a disaster. Smart water leak sensors (from brands like Govee or Flume) sit near the water heater, washing machine, or under sinks and alert you if there’s a leak. It’s thoughtful and practical in a way that regular gifts can’t be.
Experience-Based Gifts for the Person Who Has Everything
If the person you’re gifting has been living well for a while and already owns most things a home requires, the smartest move is to give them something they can’t buy at a store. Experiences — things they’ll do, eat, visit, or feel — are often more memorable than objects.
- A restaurant gift card: New homeowners are tired. They’ve been eating takeout for two weeks and spending money faster than they ever have before. A gift card to a restaurant they love — or a nice one they’ve been meaning to try — gives them a night off and a reason to celebrate.
- A grocery delivery subscription: A month or two of a grocery delivery service (like Instacart, Shipt, or Amazon Fresh) is one of those gifts that makes someone’s daily life noticeably easier. It’s not glamorous, but it’s incredibly appreciated during the moving-in chaos.
- A cleaning service appointment: Book them a professional cleaning service for one session. Moving in is dirty — there’s dust everywhere, the previous owners’ grime in every corner, and nobody wants to deep-clean before they’ve even unpacked. This gift is genuinely life-saving.
- A local museum or attraction membership: A membership to their local art museum, botanical garden, science center, or zoo is a gift that lasts a year and connects them to their new community. It’s especially thoughtful if they’re new to the area.
- A gardening or cooking class: For someone settling into a new home with a kitchen or garden, a class that teaches them something they’ve always wanted to learn is a wonderful experience gift.
- A wine or cheese subscription: Monthly deliveries of curated wines, craft cheeses, or specialty foods give them something to look forward to every month long after the housewarming has passed.
- A neighborhood welcome basket: If you live in the same area, put together a curated basket of local favorites — the best coffee shop’s beans, a jar from the farmers’ market, a coupon from a local restaurant, a transit map or guide to the neighborhood. This is especially meaningful for someone who has moved to a new city.
What Not to Buy — The Gifts That Tend to Miss
It’s worth spending a moment on what not to do, because some housewarming gifts — despite being well-intentioned — tend to land flat or create subtle awkwardness. Here’s the honest list:
Strongly Scented Items Without Knowing Their Preferences
A candle that smells incredible to you might be headache-inducing to someone else. The same goes for reed diffusers, incense, and heavily perfumed products. If you’re going with a scented gift, stick to light, clean, or fresh scents (citrus, eucalyptus, unscented beeswax) rather than strong floral or spicy ones.
Décor That Reflects Your Taste, Not Theirs
You might love rustic farmhouse styling. Your friend might be going for a minimalist modern look. A large decorative item — a sculpture, a wall hanging, a centerpiece — that doesn’t match their taste puts them in the uncomfortable position of either displaying something they don’t love or hiding it and feeling guilty. Stick to neutral décor or skip décor entirely unless you know their style really well.
Knives (In Certain Cultures)
In many cultures, gifting a knife is considered bad luck — it symbolizes cutting ties. If you’re gifting to someone who follows these traditions, it’s worth knowing before you buy. If you’re not sure, just avoid it and pick something from the kitchen section that isn’t a blade.
Large Furniture or Heavy Items
Unless you’ve had a specific conversation about what they need, large furniture gifts are risky. You don’t know their measurements, their existing pieces, or their plans for the space. Even with the best intentions, a large gift like this can create logistics headaches.
Extremely Personalized Items That Have Limited Appeal
A “Live, Laugh, Love” sign. A quote that’s deeply meaningful to you but random to them. An oversized monogram letter that doesn’t work with their aesthetic. Personalized gifts are wonderful when the personalization is meaningful to the recipient — but personalization for its own sake can actually make a gift feel more awkward.
Something You’re Regifting
A housewarming is a celebratory occasion. If you’re considering regifting something that’s been sitting in a cupboard, be honest with yourself about whether it actually fits the person. It’s better to give a genuinely chosen $20 plant than an unchosen gift that looks like an afterthought.
Housewarming Etiquette: The Questions Everyone Googles
Beyond the gift itself, there are a lot of etiquette questions that come up around housewarming parties that aren’t always obvious. Here are the most common ones, answered plainly.
Is it rude to show up to a housewarming without a gift?
Not strictly rude, but it is socially awkward if everyone else brings something. Unless the invitation specifically says “no gifts,” it’s generally expected that you’ll bring something — even if it’s just a bottle of wine or a small plant. The gift doesn’t have to be expensive; it’s more about the gesture than the amount.
When should you have a housewarming party?
There’s no fixed rule, but most people wait until they’re at least partly settled — usually within the first one to three months of moving in. You don’t want to invite guests over when you’re still living out of boxes, but you also don’t want to wait so long that the excitement of the new home has faded. A few weeks in is usually the sweet spot.
Should you give cash at a housewarming?
Cash is perfectly acceptable and, honestly, often the most useful gift for new homeowners who have dozens of small purchases ahead of them. A gift card to a home store (like Target, Wayfair, Home Depot, or a local home décor shop) is a slightly more personal version of cash and feels a bit more considered. Either is fine for any relationship level.
Do you open housewarming gifts at the party?
Unlike birthday parties, housewarming parties don’t usually include a gift-opening moment in front of everyone. Guests bring gifts, they’re set aside, and the host often opens them after the party. If there’s a group gift or something large, it might be opened at the event, but it’s not required.
How much should I spend on a housewarming gift for someone I barely know?
For an acquaintance — a coworker’s housewarming you’ve been invited to, or a neighbor you’re meeting for the first time — $20 to $30 is completely appropriate. A nice plant, a bottle of wine, or a small quality food item covers the occasion without over-spending.
Is it okay to not bring a gift to a housewarming?
If the invitation says “no gifts, please” — honor that completely. The host means it. If the invitation is silent on the topic, it’s generally better to bring something small than to arrive empty-handed, even if it’s just something consumable like wine or flowers.
What’s the difference between a housewarming and a moving party?
A moving party happens before the move and involves friends helping with the physical act of moving boxes. A housewarming happens after the move and is a celebration of the new home. Gifts are expected at a housewarming but not really at a moving party (though bringing food and drinks to fuel the movers is always appreciated).
The One Thing That Makes Any Gift More Memorable
Here’s something that doesn’t get mentioned in most housewarming gift guides: the presentation matters as much as the item itself. Not the wrapping — though that helps — but the message that comes with it.
Think about the most memorable gifts you’ve ever received. Chances are, part of what made them stick wasn’t just the object but the feeling that came with it. The card that said exactly the right thing. The moment when you understood that someone had been really thinking about you.
At a housewarming specifically, there’s a really meaningful opportunity to go beyond the standard gift card message. This is a big deal for the person who’s just moved in. They’ve been through a stressful, expensive, life-changing process. The right words — or the right gesture — can make a good gift into a great memory.
What to Write in a Housewarming Card
Most people write “Congratulations on your new home! Wishing you lots of happiness here” — which is fine, but it’s also forgettable. Here are some alternatives that actually mean something:
- “May this home hold all the moments that matter most.”
- “This is the beginning of something really good. So glad you get to call this place yours.”
- “You worked so hard for this. Now go enjoy every square inch of it.”
- “Wishing you a home full of laughter, good food, and people who love you.”
- “Every great story needs a great setting. This is your setting.”
- “Your home is a reflection of you — and if that’s true, this is going to be the best house on the block.”
- “From your first dinner here to your thousandth, may this place always feel like exactly where you belong.”
If you’re a close friend or family member, add a line that’s specific — a memory, an inside joke, a reference to their history with this home. That specificity is what turns a nice card into something kept for years.
Making the Gift Moment Itself Special
One thing that’s becoming more popular at housewarming parties — and genuinely moves people — is a video gift. Not a video of the gift itself, but a video message. Imagine being a new homeowner and at your housewarming party, someone plays a short video on the TV: your best friends from college who couldn’t make it, your parents who live three states away, your childhood best friend who’s always been part of your story — all of them saying a few words about what this moment means and what they wish for you in your new home.
It’s a different kind of gift entirely. It’s not an object; it’s a feeling. It’s the feeling of being celebrated by the people who matter most, even the ones who aren’t in the room.
Services like MessageAR make it possible to collect individual video messages from different people and bring them together in a format that’s easy to share and replay. It works beautifully for housewarming parties, and it’s the kind of thing that gets remembered long after every other gift has been unpacked and put away.
Even if you go with a more traditional physical gift, pairing it with a short, heartfelt video message — just thirty seconds of you speaking directly to the new homeowner — elevates the whole thing. It’s personal in a way that a card can’t quite match.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good housewarming gift?
A good housewarming gift balances practicality with thoughtfulness. The most appreciated options include quality kitchen items (a cast iron pan, a good cutting board), plants, cozy textiles, personalized home décor, and experience-based gifts like restaurant gift cards or a video greeting collection. The “right” answer depends on how well you know the person and what kind of home they’re settling into.
How much should you spend on a housewarming gift?
Most people spend between $25 and $75. For close friends or family, $75 to $150 is reasonable. For a coworker or acquaintance, $20 to $40 is perfectly appropriate. The relationship matters more than the occasion — you don’t need to spend as much on a housewarming as you would on a wedding gift.
What should you not give as a housewarming gift?
Avoid strongly scented items unless you know the person’s preferences, large décor pieces that reflect your taste rather than theirs, knives (in cultures where they’re considered bad luck), and items that are being regifted without genuine thought. Also avoid anything that creates a logistics problem — very large items, things that require assembly, or items that need installation.
Is it okay to give cash as a housewarming gift?
Completely acceptable. New homeowners almost always have a long list of small purchases to make, and cash or a gift card to a home store is genuinely useful. A gift card to Target, Home Depot, Wayfair, or a local home décor shop is a thoughtful version of the same idea.
What is a unique housewarming gift?
Some of the most memorable unique housewarming gifts include: a custom illustration of their new home, a shared video message from friends and family, a smart water leak detector, a subscription to a local food or wine service, a custom neighborhood map print, or a commissioned recipe book filled with recipes from people they love.
Do you need to bring a gift to a housewarming party?
Technically no, but it’s expected in most social contexts. If the invitation says “no gifts,” honor that. Otherwise, something small and thoughtful — even a bottle of wine, a plant, or a box of nice chocolates — acknowledges the occasion appropriately without requiring significant expense.
What is a traditional housewarming gift?
Traditional housewarming gifts vary by culture. In many Western traditions, bread (so the family never goes hungry), salt (for flavor and prosperity), and wine (for joy) are classic symbolic gifts. In some South Asian traditions, a lamp or incense represents light and purity in the new home. In Jewish tradition, a mezuzah is often given. Modern versions of these traditions often show up as artisan food baskets, candles, and wine.
Should you bring a gift when visiting someone’s new home for the first time?
If the visit is specifically a housewarming party, yes. If it’s just a casual first visit to see the new place, a small hostess gift — a bottle of wine, a plant, some nice biscuits — is a lovely touch but not strictly required. When in doubt, something small and consumable is always appropriate.