Licences pour Design d'intérieur en Ontario
The title 'Interior Designer' is protected in Ontario. Only ARIDO-registered members may use the title. Interior decorating is not regulated.
Key facts
En un coup d'œil
Faits clés sur les licences pour les design d'intérieurs en Ontario
Classification du métier
Regulated Profession
License Required
Certification
ARIDO Registration
Sceau rouge
Non disponible
Permis
Généralement non requis
Assurance
Recommandé
The details
Exigences de licence
What it takes to qualify
Credentials, training, and coverage for this trade
- Certification: ARIDO Registration
- No Red Seal endorsement for this trade
- Liability insurance is recommended
The title 'Interior Designer' is protected in Ontario under the Interior Designers Act, 2023. Only members registered with the Association of Registered Interior Designers of Ontario (ARIDO) may legally use the title. Registration requires an accredited post-secondary degree or diploma in interior design, supervised work experience, and passing the NCIDQ examination or ARIDO's Registered Interior Designer Assessment (RIDA). However, the practice of interior decorating (selecting colours, furnishings, accessories) is not regulated and does not require any credential. There is an important distinction between a Registered Interior Designer (who can do space planning, building code review, and construction documents) and a decorator.
Organisme de réglementation
Association of Registered Interior Designers of Ontario (ARIDO)
Visiter le site officielComment vérifier
Verify the designer is a registered member of ARIDO. Ask whether they are a Registered Interior Designer or a decorator.
Buyer beware
Signaux d'alerte à surveiller
Signaux d'alerte lors de l'embauche d'un design d'intérieur
No portfolio of completed projects or unwillingness to share client references
Pressures you to purchase all furnishings through them without disclosing their markup
No written contract outlining scope, deliverables, timeline, and fee structure
Claims the title 'Interior Designer' but is not registered with ARIDO
Before you sign
Questions à poser avant d'embaucher
A few minutes now saves you later
Posez ces questions avant de signer tout contrat
- Are you a Registered Interior Designer with ARIDO, or do you work as a decorator?
- What is your fee structure (hourly, flat fee, or cost-plus) and what does it include?
- Can I see examples of completed projects similar to mine in scope and style?
- How do you handle procurement, and do you disclose markups on furnishings?
- What is included in your contract, and how many revision rounds are covered?
Good to know
Questions fréquemment posées
Les design d'intérieurs en Ontario ont-ils besoin d'une licence ?
The title 'Interior Designer' is protected in Ontario under the Interior Designers Act, 2023. Only members registered with the Association of Registered Interior Designers of Ontario (ARIDO) may legally use the title. Registration requires an accredited post-secondary degree or diploma in interior design, supervised work experience, and passing the NCIDQ examination or ARIDO's Registered Interior Designer Assessment (RIDA). However, the practice of interior decorating (selecting colours, furnishings, accessories) is not regulated and does not require any credential. There is an important distinction between a Registered Interior Designer (who can do space planning, building code review, and construction documents) and a decorator.
Comment puis-je vérifier les qualifications d'un design d'intérieur en Ontario ?
Verify the designer is a registered member of ARIDO. Ask whether they are a Registered Interior Designer or a decorator.
Quels sont les signaux d'alarme à surveiller au moment d'embaucher un design d'intérieur ?
(1) No portfolio of completed projects or unwillingness to share client references (2) Pressures you to purchase all furnishings through them without disclosing their markup (3) No written contract outlining scope, deliverables, timeline, and fee structure (4) Claims the title 'Interior Designer' but is not registered with ARIDO
Quelles questions devrais-je poser avant d'embaucher un design d'intérieur ?
(1) Are you a Registered Interior Designer with ARIDO, or do you work as a decorator? (2) What is your fee structure (hourly, flat fee, or cost-plus) and what does it include? (3) Can I see examples of completed projects similar to mine in scope and style? (4) How do you handle procurement, and do you disclose markups on furnishings? (5) What is included in your contract, and how many revision rounds are covered?
Mon design d'intérieur devrait-il détenir une assurance ?
Bien que cela ne soit pas exigé par la loi, il est fortement recommandé que les design d'intérieurs détiennent une assurance responsabilité. Demandez une preuve de couverture avant d'embaucher.
Combien coûte un design d'intérieur en Ontario ?
Les tarifs habituels pour les design d'intérieurs en Ontario varient de $75-$250/hour. Scope of the project (single room vs. full home), designer experience and reputation, billing model (hourly, flat fee, or cost-plus where the designer marks up furnishings 15-35%), complexity of custom elements, whether procurement and project management are included, and the cost of furnishings and materials (which are separate from design fees). GTA designers typically charge 20-40% more than those in smaller Ontario communities. Some designers require a minimum project budget.
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