A guest room often sits empty for weeks at a time, then suddenly needs to feel as comfortable as a small hotel suite. Cabinets are the quiet workhorses of that transformation. They tidy away spare bedding, hold a few thoughtful extras for visitors and keep the room looking calm rather than cluttered. Below are six ideas that suit the proportions and habits of UK homes, from compact box rooms in terraced houses to larger guest suites in newer builds.
Symmetry tends to read as restful, which is exactly what a guest room should feel. Place a narrow cabinet on either side of the bed so visitors have somewhere for a glass of water, a phone and a book. Choose a depth of around 35 to 40 centimetres if floor space is tight, and look for a single drawer with a soft closing runner. A pair of wooden bedside cabinets in oak or walnut works beautifully against painted walls and softens the look of metal bed frames.
Most guest rooms benefit from one piece of clothing storage rather than a full wardrobe. A four drawer chest placed below a window keeps sight lines open and leaves the wall free for art or a wall mirror. Visitors can unpack a small case without ever opening a wardrobe door. Browse our range of chest of drawers for shapes that suit period rooms as well as modern flats.
Many guest rooms in older UK homes are the smallest bedroom in the house. Mirrored fronts make these spaces feel airier without taking up extra inches. A mirror chest of drawers reflects daylight back into the room and reduces the need for a separate dressing mirror. Pair it with calm bedding and one ceramic lamp so the surface stays peaceful rather than busy.
If your guest room doubles as a household store cupboard, a tall narrow cabinet earns its place. Use the upper shelves for spare duvets and the lower section for towels, hot water bottles and a small first aid tin. Choose a piece with solid doors so the contents stay out of view. Cabinets in matte finishes tend to wear better in busy households than glossy ones, and they are easier to keep fingerprint free.
One trick borrowed from boutique hotels is to use a low cabinet as both storage and a luggage perch. A two door sideboard at around 70 centimetres tall gives visitors somewhere to rest a suitcase without putting it on the bed. Inside, you can store hairdryers, an extra pillow and a folded throw. Place a small tray on top with a carafe and two glasses for a thoughtful touch.
Chimney breasts and sloping eaves create the kind of awkward corners that most freestanding furniture struggles with. A made to measure cabinet that follows the alcove turns wasted space into useful storage. If a full bespoke fit is not possible, look for a slim freestanding cabinet that sits flush against the wall and finish the gap with a length of skirting. The room will read as considered rather than improvised.
Guest rooms tend to suit calmer palettes than main bedrooms. Pale oak, soft grey, warm white and natural rattan all sit well together and forgive the occasional knock from a passing suitcase. Reserve high gloss finishes for rooms with steady natural light, since they can look flat in north facing spaces. If you would like to coordinate the cabinets with the rest of the bedroom, our bedroom furniture collection offers ranges that share the same handles, woods and proportions.
For shoppers comparing options across the wider home, you can also explore our full catalogue at Furniture in Fashion, where every piece is dispatched with free UK delivery.
Two is usually enough. A bedside cabinet for visitors and one larger storage piece such as a chest of drawers will cover a short stay without overcrowding the room.
They do not need to match exactly. Aim for the same tonal family, for example warm woods together or cool greys together, so the room feels cohesive rather than identical.
Aim for the top of the cabinet to sit roughly level with the top of the mattress. That keeps lamps at a comfortable reading height and avoids visitors reaching down.
Yes, particularly in smaller rooms. They reflect light, reduce the visual weight of the furniture and double as a quick check mirror for visitors getting ready.
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