Inside vs Outside Mount Roman Shades: A Side-by-Side Comparison for Every Window Type

You picked out the perfect roman shade fabric. The color is right, the opacity is right, the style is chef's kiss. Then you hit the mounting question, and everything stalls. Inside or outside mount? It sounds minor, but this one decision affects how your shades look, fit, and function for years.
Here's what we'll break down:
● Inside vs outside mount: appearance and aesthetics
● Light control and privacy differences
● Window compatibility and fit
● Installation ease and hardware needs
● Energy efficiency comparison
● Cost and long-term value
At BlindsMagic, we make custom roman shades that work beautifully in both mount styles. Every order is made-to-measure, ships free, and comes with a 3-year warranty.
TL;DR: The Full Comparison
Can't read the whole thing? We get it. Here's everything stacked side by side.
|
Factor |
Inside Mount |
Outside Mount |
|
Appearance |
Sleek, minimal, tailored |
Bold, dramatic, layered |
|
Trim visibility |
Fully visible |
Covered by fabric |
|
Room perception |
Keeps rooms feeling open |
Makes windows look larger |
|
Hardware visibility |
Hidden inside the frame |
Slightly visible from the side |
|
Best design style |
Modern, minimalist, Scandi |
Traditional, transitional, glam |
|
Light control |
Good (small edge gaps) |
Superior (full window coverage) |
|
Privacy |
Slight gaps at edges |
Near-complete coverage |
|
Best rooms |
Kitchens, offices, living rooms |
Bedrooms, nurseries, home theaters |
|
Min. frame depth |
1.5" to 2.5" (3-4" for motorized) |
No depth requirement |
|
Window compatibility |
Needs square, deep frames |
Works on virtually any window |
|
Measurement precision |
Tight (1/8" accuracy) |
Forgiving (1/4" to 1/2" wiggle room) |
|
Installation difficulty |
Slightly more precise |
Slightly more flexible |
|
Energy efficiency |
Better air pocket near glass |
Better full-coverage seal |
|
Cost |
Slightly less fabric used |
Slightly more fabric needed |
The bottom line? Neither mount is universally better. Your window's depth, the room's function, and your design preferences should drive the decision.
Inside vs Outside Mount: Appearance
The way your roman shades are mounted changes how your entire window feels. Not just how it functions. How it looks when you walk into a room, how it interacts with your trim, and how it shapes the perception of space. Let's break this down.
Inside Mount: The Minimalist's Pick
An inside mount roman shade sits within the window frame, flush with the wall. It doesn't reach beyond the edges of your casing. It doesn't compete with the architecture. It just... fits.
This is the look you want if your design leans modern, contemporary, or Scandinavian. Clean lines, zero bulk, and a tailored feel that says, "yes, this was custom-made for this exact window."
Here's what makes inside mounts shine aesthetically:
● Streamlined, built-in appearance that blends with the wall rather than sitting on top of it
● Showcases decorative trim and molding instead of hiding it under fabric
● Takes up zero wall space, which keeps smaller rooms feeling open
● Pairs easily with curtains or drapes layered over the top for a designer look
The trade-off? You'll notice thin slivers of light along the edges where the shade meets the frame. It's subtle, but it's there. And for some rooms, that small gap breaks the visual consistency you're going for.
Outside Mount: The Statement Maker
An outside mount roman shade is installed above the window frame, on the wall or ceiling. The fabric extends beyond the casing on all sides, covering the frame entirely.
This is the option that makes a room feel bigger than it actually is. By mounting the shade a few inches above and wider than the frame, you trick the eye into perceiving taller windows and higher ceilings. It's one of the oldest staging techniques interior designers use, and it still works.
Outside mounts give you:
● A bolder, more dramatic presence on the wall
● The illusion of larger windows, especially in compact rooms
● Coverage for imperfect frames, uneven trim, or aging casings you'd rather not highlight
● Flexibility with prints and patterns since the larger fabric area lets designs really stand out
The flip side? Hardware becomes more visible from the side profile. And in tight or narrow spaces, outside mounts can feel a bit bulky compared to the recessed elegance of an inside mount.
Quick Visual Comparison
|
Feature |
Inside Mount |
Outside Mount |
|
Overall look |
Sleek, minimal, tailored |
Bold, dramatic, layered |
|
Trim visibility |
Fully visible |
Covered by fabric |
|
Room perception |
Keeps rooms feeling open |
Makes windows look larger |
|
Hardware visibility |
Hidden inside the frame |
Slightly visible from the side |
|
Best design style |
Modern, minimalist, Scandi |
Traditional, transitional, glam |
Which Looks Better?
Neither. Seriously. It depends entirely on what you're working with.
Got beautiful crown molding or hand-carved casings? Inside mount lets you flaunt them. Working with builder-grade frames that have seen better days? Outside mount hides every flaw.
If you're ordering custom roman shades from BlindsMagic, both mount styles work with every fabric and opacity level in their lineup. And since every shade is made-to-measure, the fit stays precise whether you're mounting inside a narrow frame or spanning well beyond it.
Pro tip: If you're torn between the two, order free fabric samples from BlindsMagic first. Hold them against your window in both positions. You'll see which mount complements your space in seconds.
Light Control and Privacy Differences

This is where the mount decision stops being about looks and starts being about livability. Because once the sun hits your bedroom window at 6 AM, aesthetics take a back seat fast.
Inside Mount: Good, Not Great
Inside mount roman shades sit within the frame. That means the fabric is slightly narrower than the window opening itself. Most manufacturers apply a small deduction (typically 1/4" to 1/2") to ensure the shade moves up and down without catching or binding.
That deduction creates thin gaps on both sides of the shade. They're small, but they're real.
In rooms where ambient light is fine (living rooms, kitchens, home offices), these gaps are barely noticeable. But in a nursery at nap time? A bedroom where streetlights bleed through? Those slivers of light add up.
What helps:
● Choosing a blackout-lined fabric reduces light penetration through the material itself
● Pairing inside mount shades with curtains or drapes layered over top seals most remaining gaps
● Going with a heavier, denser fabric blocks more light, even without a blackout liner
Outside Mount: The Blackout Winner
Outside mount shades cover the entire window and extend a few inches past the frame on every side. That overlap is the difference between "mostly dark" and "almost completely dark."
For bedrooms, nurseries, home theaters, or any space where light control is non-negotiable, outside mount is the stronger performer.
The same logic applies to privacy. When the shade extends beyond the frame edges, there's far less chance of someone catching a sliver of visibility from outside. Inside mounts, by contrast, leave those small edge gaps where someone standing at the right angle could technically see in.
The Room-by-Room Breakdown
|
Room |
Recommended Mount |
Why |
|
Bedroom |
Outside |
Maximum light blocking for sleep |
|
Nursery |
Outside |
Nap time demands near-total darkness |
|
Living room |
Either |
Ambient light is usually welcome |
|
Kitchen |
Inside |
Natural light is your friend while cooking |
|
Home office |
Inside |
Soft, filtered light reduces screen glare |
|
Home theater |
Outside |
You want zero light interference |
|
Bathroom |
Outside |
Privacy is the top priority |
If you go with BlindsMagic roman shades, you can choose from 80% to 100% blackout fabric options. Pair a 100% blackout fabric with an outside mount, and you're looking at near-total darkness without needing heavy drapes on top. That's one product doing the work of two.
Window Compatibility and Fit

Not every window can handle both mount styles. Before you fall in love with a particular look, your window's physical structure needs to pass a few checks.
The Depth Test (Inside Mount)
Inside mount roman shades require a minimum window frame depth of about 1.5 to 2.5 inches, depending on the product and lift system. Motorized shades typically need closer to 3 to 4 inches because the motor housing takes up additional space.
Here's how to check yours:
1. Grab a steel tape measure
2. At the top of the window frame, measure from the front edge straight back toward the glass
3. Record the measurement to the nearest 1/8 inch
4. Check for any obstructions (cranks, handles, locks) that eat into that depth
If your frame clears the minimum, an inside mount will work. If it doesn't, you're looking at either a partially recessed shade that sticks out past the frame (not ideal) or switching to an outside mount.
Outside Mount: The Universal Fit
Outside mounts don't care about frame depth. At all.
Since the brackets attach to the wall or ceiling above the window, frame depth becomes irrelevant. This makes outside mounts the go-to solution for:
● Shallow window frames common in older homes and some modern builds
● Casement windows with protruding cranks or handles inside the frame
● Doors with glass panels that rarely have enough depth for inside mounting
● Arched, round, or uniquely shaped windows that can't host internal hardware
● Uneven or out-of-square frames, where an inside mount would highlight the irregularity
What About Window Size?
Both mounts work across a wide range of window sizes, but there are nuances worth knowing.
● Small windows tend to look better with outside mounts because the extended fabric creates the illusion of a bigger opening. An inside mount on an already-small window can make it feel even more compact.
● Large windows are usually fine either way, but inside mounts keep things visually clean on wide expanses of wall. You're not adding extra bulk where there's already plenty of surface area.
● Multiple windows on the same wall is where things get interesting. Inside mounts treat each window individually, keeping them distinct. Outside mounts can be sized to overlap and create a unified, continuous look across the wall. Both work. It depends on whether you want definition or cohesion.
BlindsMagic makes all their shades to your exact measurements, so whether your window is 18 inches wide or pushing past 90 inches, every shade is built specifically for your frame. No rounding up or down to a preset size and hoping for the best.
Installation Ease and Hardware Needs
Let's talk about what actually happens when you open the box, grab a drill, and start putting these things up.
Inside Mount Installation
Inside mounts are the more precise of the two. You're working within the frame, which means your measurements need to be accurate to the 1/8 inch. There's less room for error because the shade has to fit snugly without binding or leaving oversized gaps.
The process looks like this:
1. Mark your bracket positions on the "ceiling" of the window frame (the top interior surface)
2. Pre-drill pilot holes using a 1/8" drill bit
3. Secure the brackets with the included screws, driving them upward into the frame
4. Snap the headrail into the brackets until you hear or feel the click
5. Test the shade to make sure it raises and lowers smoothly
The upside? No wall anchors needed. You're drilling directly into wood framing, which provides a solid hold. And the hardware is completely hidden once the shade is in place. Clean and invisible.
The downside? You're working in a tight space, often overhead, with limited visibility. If your frame isn't perfectly square, you'll need to adjust bracket placement to compensate.
Outside Mount Installation
Outside mounts are more forgiving. You're attaching L-shaped brackets to the wall or trim above the window, which gives you more flexibility in positioning.
The steps:
1. Use a level and pencil to mark bracket positions above the window
2. Check for studs behind the drywall (a stud finder is worth the $15 investment here)
3. Pre-drill pilot holes and install wall anchors if you're not hitting a stud
4. Secure the L-brackets to the wall with the long screws included
5. Snap the headrail onto the brackets and confirm everything is level
6. Test the shade for smooth operation
Because you're working on an open wall rather than inside a recessed frame, you have better sightlines and more room to maneuver. The bracket positions are also easier to adjust if something feels off.
The catch? You need a level. Without the window frame acting as a natural guide, eyeballing bracket placement is a recipe for a crooked shade. Also, if your brackets miss a stud, drywall anchors are essential. A heavy roman shade hanging from a loose screw in drywall alone is a disaster waiting to happen.
Hardware Comparison at a Glance
|
Detail |
Inside Mount |
Outside Mount |
|
Brackets needed |
Sometimes none (direct screw) |
L-brackets required |
|
Drilling surface |
Top of window frame (wood) |
Wall or ceiling (may need anchors) |
|
Level required |
Frame acts as guide |
A must-have tool |
|
Measurement tolerance |
Very tight (1/8" precision) |
More forgiving (1/4" to 1/2" wiggle room) |
|
Hardware visibility |
Fully concealed |
Slightly visible from the side |
|
Average install time |
15-20 minutes per window |
15-25 minutes per window |
The DIY Factor
Both mounts are very doable as a weekend DIY project. But if you've never installed window treatments before, outside mounts are the friendlier starting point. The extra measurement forgiveness alone takes a lot of pressure off.
Energy Efficiency Comparison

Both mount styles help insulate your windows, but they do it differently.
● Inside mounts sit closer to the glass, creating a tighter air pocket between the fabric and the windowpane. That proximity helps trap heat in winter and block solar gain in summer right at the source. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, up to 20% of home energy loss happens through windows, so even a small improvement here counts.
● Outside mounts cover the entire window and frame, which reduces drafts sneaking in around the edges. If your frames aren't perfectly square or you're dealing with older, leaky windows, that full-coverage seal makes a noticeable difference.
The honest answer? The gap between them is small. Your fabric choice and lining matter far more than the mount style itself. A blackout-lined roman shade on either mount will outperform an unlined shade every time.
BlindsMagic offers roman shades in multiple blackout levels (up to 100%), and every shade is made-to-measure for a precision fit. Tighter fit means fewer air gaps, which means better insulation regardless of mount type.
Cost and Long-Term Value
The mount style itself doesn't dramatically change the price of your roman shades. The bigger cost drivers are fabric type, blackout level, motorization, and overall shade dimensions.
That said, there are subtle differences worth knowing:
● Inside mounts use slightly less fabric since the shade fits within the frame. On large orders covering multiple windows, this can add up to modest savings.
● Outside mounts require wider and sometimes taller fabric cuts to extend beyond the frame, which can nudge the price slightly higher.
From a long-term value perspective, both mounts hold up equally well when the shade is properly installed. The real cost trap is ordering the wrong mount for your window and having to reorder.
Measure twice. Order once.
With BlindsMagic, you're getting made-to-measure shades starting around $184.99, free shipping, a 30-day return policy, and a 3-year warranty. That combination makes either mount style a low-risk investment. If something doesn't fit or feel right, you're covered.
Find Your Perfect Fit With BlindsMagic
Inside or outside mount, the "right" choice always comes down to your windows, your room, and your priorities. Neither option is wrong when it matches the space.
Key takeaways
● Inside mounts deliver a clean, minimal look but need adequate frame depth
● Outside mounts offer superior light blocking and work on virtually any window
● Your fabric and lining choice matters more than the mount style for energy efficiency
● Measurement precision is critical for inside mounts, more forgiving for outside
● Mixing mount styles across different rooms is a smart, practical approach
BlindsMagic takes the guesswork out of both options. Every roman shade is made-to-measure, works with either mount style, and ships with all the hardware you need. Pair that with free shipping, a 30-day return policy, and a 3-year warranty, and you've got a pretty safe bet no matter which mount you choose.
