Millennials and Gen Z Are Turning Everyday Projects Into Something Meaningful

There’s something oddly satisfying about fixing or making something yourself, especially when you start out thinking you’ll probably mess it up. Maybe it’s painting a room, building a shelf, replacing a light fixture, or finally tackling a project that sat untouched for months. You finish, step back, and suddenly the space feels different because you changed it with your own hands.

That feeling is a big reason Millennials and Gen Z are leaning harder into DIY lately. According to a survey of 2,000 renters and homeowners, finishing a home project brings more than just a nicer-looking space. People said it gave them a real sense of pride, confidence, and emotional relief that lasted long after the project was done.

And honestly, that makes sense. So much of life right now feels expensive, uncertain, or completely outside our control. DIY gives people something solid and visible at the end of the day. You can point to it and say, “I did that.”

For a lot of younger adults, DIY isn’t really about perfection anyway. It’s about learning as you go, making mistakes, saving money where you can, and creating a home that feels personal instead of temporary.

That’s part of why DIY has become more than just a weekend hobby. It’s turning into a way people reconnect with creativity, confidence, and a sense of control in everyday life.

woman painting a wall
Image Credit: Deposit Photos

Finishing Something Still Feels Powerful

The survey found that 83% of respondents say there’s nothing more satisfying than completing a DIY project on their own. Not buying something new. Not watching someone else do it online. Finishing it themselves.

Even more telling, 86% said completing a home-related DIY project makes them feel accomplished, and that feeling lasts about 6 weeks.

That kind of delayed reward stands out in a culture built on instant gratification. DIY asks for effort, patience, and problem-solving, and it gives something back that scrolling doesn’t.

DIY as a Source of Confidence, Not Perfection

For Millennials and Gen Z especially, DIY doesn’t seem to be about chasing perfect results. It’s about capability.

The average respondent reported completing eight DIY projects in their current home. Homeowners averaged closer to ten, while renters averaged five, still a meaningful number, especially given how temporary rental living can feel.

Those first projects were often simple: painting a wall, mounting a TV, hanging a picture frame. Not flashy. Just enough to prove I can do this.

From there, confidence grows.

Why Watching Someone Else Succeed Matters

Interestingly, 63% of people said seeing a friend succeed at a tricky home project makes them believe they can do it too. It’s not expert-level inspiration that motivates, it’s relatability.

At the same time, confidence tends to dip when projects feel out of reach. Nearly a third of respondents said their confidence drops when they see professional-level DIY content on social media or AI-generated ideas that feel unrealistic.

The takeaway is clear: DIY confidence doesn’t grow through comparison. It grows through seeing real people figure things out in real spaces.

The Projects People Want—But Haven’t Finished Yet

Despite the motivation, many respondents admitted to having unfinished projects at home. On average, two of them.

The most common include painting a room, building furniture, installing flooring, mounting a TV, fixing loose fixtures, or adding small decorative details. Most people said they’d been putting these tasks off for months, not because they don’t care, but because starting feels intimidating.

The top barriers were simple:
– Fear of messing it up
– Not having the right tools

In fact, one in six respondents doesn’t even own a basic toolkit, especially renters, who are less likely to invest in tools despite wanting to personalize their space.

DIY Brings Back a Sense of Control

What stands out most in this survey isn’t the projects themselves, it’s what they represent.

DIY gives people control over their space. It turns a rental into something personal. It replaces “waiting until someday” with “I did this today.” It transforms uncertainty into something solid you can point to.

That’s why respondents said they feel inspired by new DIY ideas at least once a week, even if they don’t act on them right away. And it’s why most said they want to complete three DIY projects by the end of the year, with one in five aiming for five or more.

Why DIY Works Right Now

DIY doesn’t promise perfection. It promises progress.

It meets people where they are, limited time, limited tools, limited confidence, and builds upward from there. It turns effort into pride. And in a moment where control feels scarce, it offers something tangible.

You don’t need a garage full of equipment or professional skills to feel that shift. You just need one finished project.

Sometimes that’s enough to remind you what you’re capable of and carry that confidence into everything else.

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