17 Popular Exterior House Styles (and How to Spot Them) (2024)

Having trouble explaining exactly what you want in a new home or remodel? If so, it could be because a typical house rarely expresses a single architectural style. Getting back to basics will help.

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Colonial Style

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This residential style is considered one of the most popular in the history of the United States. Characteristics:

-- Usually two or three stories with high-pitched roof

-- One or more dormers

-- Massive chimney or chimneys

-- Narrow clapboard siding (sometimes brick)

-- Double-hung, multipane windows (usually in pairs) placed symmetrically on both sides of a central front door

-- Decorative crown over front door supported by pilasters or columns

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Cape Cod Style

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Cape Cods were first built by English colonists who came to America in the late 1600s. Colonial Revival Cape Cods became very popular in the 1930s. Characteristics:

-- Steep roof with side gables, chimney usually on one end

-- One and a half stories, with one or more dormers on the half story

-- Sided with wide clapboards, wood shingles, or brick

-- Centered front door, most often plain, but sometimes with portico

-- Hardwood floors and center hall floor plan

-- Multipaned, double-hung windows with decorative shutters

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Contemporary Style

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Contemporary designs are not defined by a single shape or style. One reliable clue, however, is the presence of large, tall panes of glass. Characteristics:

-- Natural siding materials such as wood or stone

-- Odd, irregular shapes

-- Plain, lack of ornamentation

-- Open floor plan

-- Cathedral ceilings and exposed beams, or flat roofs

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Cottage Style

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Small, informal houses may be called cottages, although historically, cottages could be quite large. They often are sited in garden settings, with window boxes and trellises. Characteristics:

-- Tall, peaked roof

-- Masonry chimney

-- Meandering walkway to the front door

-- Large, multipane windows

-- Wood siding (often shingles)

-- Surrounded by flowers and climbing plants

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Craftsman Style

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Craftsman style, an early 20th-century favorite, exemplifies the Arts and Crafts movement emphasizing simple forms and natural materials. Characteristics:

-- Low-pitched gable roof with exposed rafters, decorative beams, or braces under the gables

-- Wide, welcoming porch supported by massive columns

-- Wood, stone, or stucco siding

-- Double-hung windows often grouped in threes, with the upper sashes divided into two or three panes over a plain lower sash

-- Open floor plan, built-in cabinets, shelving, and seating

-- Organic colors and the use of natural materials such as river rock

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Farmhouse Style

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There are various farmhouse styles, but this unpretentious version can be thought of as a simplified Victorian. Characteristics:

-- Asymmetrical plan with dormers and gables

-- Either shingle or metal roof

-- Tall windows

-- Wraparound porch with some Victorian detailing

-- Lap siding with simple moldings and trim

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Federal Revival Style

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Federalist architecture has its roots in England. It was favored in America during the late 1700s and early 1800s, although you'll see Federalist details in many homes today. Characteristics:

-- Large and graceful two-story brick with massive chimneys

-- Centered front door often sheltered by a portico and topped with a fan-shaped transom light

-- Dentil moldings in the cornice and fan-shape or elliptical gable windows

-- Palladian windows

-- Oval rooms and recessed wall niches

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Georgian Revival Style

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The Georgian style is often confused with Federal. Georgian homes were popular in the U.S. from about 1715 to 1780 and are more angular than Federal. Characteristics:

-- Brick or wood sided, symmetrical and square in shape

-- Centered front door, often with flattened columns on each side and a decorative crown above

-- Medium-pitched roof with a chimney on each end

-- Minimal roof overhang

-- Five double-hung windows or dormers across the front with 9 or 12 panes in each sash

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Greek Revival Style

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By the mid-1800s, Americans identified more with Grecian architecture than British. Greek Revival mansions became common, especially in the South. Characteristics:

-- Square, with tall double-hung windows on each side

-- Shallow-pitched roof

-- Front-facing columned portico, usually supporting a triangular pediment

-- White clapboard exterior

-- Decorative pilasters

-- Dentil moldings and a heavy cornice

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International Style

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The International style is often explained by the phrase, "less is more." It uses industrial materials and emphasizes free-flowing spaces and lack of clutter. Characteristics:

-- Flat roof and large expanses of glass, including glass block

-- Neutral palette, simple geometric shapes

-- Constructed of steel and concrete, which enables open interiors

-- Clad in white stucco or wood, rarely brick and mortar

-- Tubular steel railings around porches and decks

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Mediterranean Revival Style

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The heritage of the mission churches built by Spanish colonialists in America lives on, especially in the Southwest. It's also called mission or California mission. Characteristics:

-- Clad in adobe-like stucco

-- Flat or low-pitch roof with clay tiles

-- Balconies with black, wrought-iron railings

-- Often built around access to an inner courtyard

-- Deeply shaded porches and dark interiors

-- Terra-cotta pavers

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Ranch House Style

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Ranch houses became popular in the 1950s and '60s when land was cheap and families wanted an economical house in the suburbs. Characteristics:

-- Single story, with a low-pitched gable end or hipped roof

-- Usually rectangular, but can be L- or U-shaped

-- Long and low to the ground

-- Sliding glass doors leading to a patio

-- Attached garage, simple open floor plan

-- Plain, lack of ornamentation

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Shingle Style

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This Victorian variation has its origins in the 19th century when it was built as a vacation home along the shores of New England. Characteristics:

-- Continuous shingle cladding on all exterior surfaces

-- Free form, rambling architecture

-- Stone chimney

-- Wide porches, asymmetrical massing, dormer windows, half turrets

-- Lower portion may be clad in heavy stone

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Southern Colonial Style

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Colonial homes were as popular in the Southern colonies as the North, but the Southern version had the chimneys at the ends instead of the center. Characteristics:

-- Steeply pitched gable roof

-- Symmetrical in shape, with centered front door

-- Multipane, tall, double-hung windows

-- Narrow plan, often only one room deep

-- Wide, welcoming front porch

-- Tall foundation walls to protect against moisture damage

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Spanish Colonial Style

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Also known as Southwestern, this style goes back to the early Spanish influence in the southwestern United States. Characteristics:

-- Massive masonry walls made of rough-cut stone blocks, or wood-frame walls covered with stucco

-- Muted earth tones of red clay or ochre on exterior

-- Small windows

-- Large, ornate wooden doors

-- Low, flat roof

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Tudor Style

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Tudor homes seem reminiscent of childhood fairy-tale castles. They became popular in the U.S. in the 1920s and '30s, then again in the '70s and '80s. Characteristics:

-- Steeply pitched roofs with wide gables and massive chimneys

-- Brick and stucco cladding, combined with stone trim and door surrounds

-- Tall, narrow, casem*nt windows with multiple panes

-- Larger Tudors feature wood and stucco half-timbering

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Victorian Style

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Although there are many 19th-century Victorian architectural styles, the one that usually comes to mind is Queen Anne. Characteristics:

-- Steep gable roofs

-- Lacy ornamental woodwork (gingerbread)

-- Tall, narrow windows

-- Turned columns, turrets, and porches

-- Decorative wooden brackets, patterned shingles, clapboard siding

-- Combinations of up to eight exterior colors on the same house (hence the term "painted lady")

17 Popular Exterior House Styles (and How to Spot Them) (2024)

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