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Renovating a Dated '90s Condo for Short-Term Rental
Renovations

Renovating a Dated '90s Condo for Short-Term Rental

Honey-oak trim, builder brass-and-glass light fixtures, beige tile, and a mauve accent or two — the 1990s condo special. We've flipped a few, and the good news is that the dated look is almost entirely in the finishes, not the building. Here's how we modernized a '90s condo into a booked-out short-term rental, and what we kept versus changed.

It's the Finishes, Not the Condo

The first thing to understand about a dated condo is that what reads as 'old' is the surface finishes — the trim colour, the fixtures, the tile — not the underlying space. The layout was fine, the bones were sound. So we didn't gut anything; we changed the finishes and the lighting, which is where almost all the dated feeling lives. That realization keeps a '90s flip affordable.

Taming the Oak Trim

The orange-toned honey oak everywhere is the era's signature, and painting it was the single most transformative change. A warm white over the trim and a soft greige on the cabinets instantly dragged the condo into the present. If you have quality oak you'd rather keep, refinishing to a warmer, less-orange tone works too — but for a rental, paint is cheaper and more impactful.

Out With the Builder Brass

The dated brass-and-glass dome fixtures and harsh overheads had to go. We replaced them with clean, warm modern sconces and a simple glass pendant, all on warm 2700K bulbs. Swapping dated lighting for clean modern fixtures modernizes a condo faster than almost anything, and warm bulbs make the whole space feel current and inviting rather than stuck in 1995.

Refreshing the Beige Tile

The beige and mauve bathroom tile got a refresh rather than a rip-out — grout renewal, a painted vanity, warm brass fittings, and good warm sconces at the mirror. You can also paint tile or add an affordable overlay where it's really dated. A refreshed bathroom photographs current for a fraction of a re-tile, and guests care about clean and warm over brand-new.

Hardware and Taps

Swapping the dated hardware and taps for clean warm-modern pieces is a cheap, high-impact update in a '90s condo. Warm brass or matte black pulls and faucets instantly modernize the kitchen and bath. It's a small spend that makes the refreshed (not replaced) cabinetry read as intentional and current.

A Consistent Warm Palette

The mauve-and-beige '90s palette is what dates a condo as much as the oak, so we replaced it with a consistent warm-neutral scheme — warm whites, warm wood, a few earthy accents. A coherent, current palette tied together with warm lighting makes the whole condo read as one considered, modern space rather than a patchwork of era-specific finishes.

What We Kept

We kept the sound bones, the layout, the solid-core doors, and anything structurally fine — there's no sense ripping out what works. The skill in a '90s flip is changing only the finishes and lighting that date the space, while keeping the good structure that would cost a fortune to replace. Restraint keeps the budget in check.

The Result

For the cost of paint, lighting, hardware, and finish refreshes — not a gut renovation — the dated condo became a warm, current, photogenic rental that books out. The lesson of the '90s flip is that the era is only skin-deep: change the finishes and the lighting, keep the good bones, and a dated condo becomes a contemporary stay guests love.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you modernize a 1990s condo?

Tackle the era's signatures: paint or update honey-oak trim and cabinets, swap dated brass and chrome fixtures for clean warm modern ones, replace builder lighting with warm layered fixtures, and refresh beige tile and surfaces with paint or affordable updates. Lighting and paint do the most to drag a '90s condo into the present without a gut renovation.

Should you paint oak trim and cabinets?

It depends on the wood and the look you want, but painting dated orange-toned oak trim and cabinets is one of the most transformative budget updates in a '90s home. A warm white or soft greige instantly modernizes the space. Quality oak can be refinished to a warmer tone instead if you prefer to keep wood, but paint is usually cheaper and more impactful for a rental.

What lighting updates a dated condo?

Replacing builder-grade brass-and-glass fixtures and harsh overheads with clean, warm modern lighting transforms a dated condo. Warm 2700K bulbs, a simple modern pendant, and wall sconces at eye level modernize the feel instantly. In rentals, plug-in versions let you add modern lighting with no rewiring.

What should you keep in a '90s condo?

Keep sound bones, solid wood where it can be refinished or painted, good layouts, and anything structurally fine — there's no need to rip out what works. The dated look usually comes from finishes (trim colour, fixtures, tile), not the underlying condo, so changing surfaces and lighting modernizes it without expensive structural work.

How do you make a dated rental feel current?

Modernize the finishes and lighting rather than the structure: warm white paint over dated trim, clean modern fixtures and hardware, warm layered lighting, and current, simple furnishing. A consistent warm-neutral palette and good lighting make a dated condo read as current and inviting in photos and in person.

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