Children’s rooms in UK homes are often compact, yet they need to accommodate sleeping, studying, dressing and plenty of play. The challenge is finding storage that keeps everything tidy without swallowing the open floor area where imagination thrives. With a bit of planning, it is entirely possible to gain space rather than lose it. Below are six practical ideas that work in real homes, whether you have a small box room or a slightly larger nursery turning into a child’s bedroom.
The space beneath a bed is often forgotten, yet it can hold a remarkable amount. A bed frame with built in drawers or a mid sleeper with a clear opening underneath turns wasted floor area into storage for bedding, seasonal clothing and bulkier toys. Look at our range of children’s beds for designs that include integrated drawers, pull out trundles or open shelving below the mattress. This keeps the visible floor clear so there is room to spread out a train set or a puzzle.
When floor space is limited, the walls become your most valuable surface. A slim tall unit takes a small footprint but offers generous vertical capacity. Stack baskets for soft toys at the bottom, books in the middle and items used less often near the top. Pair a tall children’s wardrobe with a narrow bookcase rather than a wide, low chest, and you instantly reclaim square footage for play.
A well chosen toy box can serve two purposes at once. It holds the daily flood of bricks, figurines and craft pieces, and it gives your child a place to perch when reading or pulling on shoes. Place one along an empty wall and the room gains a reading nook without adding a separate bench. Browse our children’s toy box collection for styles that suit nursery palettes as well as older children’s tastes.
The back of the bedroom door is one of the most underused surfaces in the home. Over door hooks, fabric pockets or slim racks can hold dressing gowns, school bags, hair accessories and small soft toys. This frees the main wardrobe for clothing and removes the cluttered look of items draped on a chair. It is a low cost addition that suits rented homes since it leaves no marks behind.
Open shelves work well in children’s rooms because they make tidying intuitive. When everything has a clearly visible home, putting toys away becomes part of play rather than a battle. Group items in shallow baskets on each shelf so smaller pieces stay contained. Keep the lowest shelves for the toys your child uses most often, with breakable or older keepsakes placed higher up out of reach.
As children grow, they need a surface for drawing, homework and quiet activities. A small desk with drawers or a lift up lid hides craft supplies, paper and pens while presenting a clean surface when not in use. Pair it with one of our children’s chairs sized appropriately for younger users. When the desk is closed, the room feels calmer and the play area takes centre stage again.
Smart storage in a child’s room is less about adding more furniture and more about choosing pieces that work harder. Beds with drawers, tall slim units, dual purpose toy boxes and a tidy desk solution can transform a cluttered space into one that feels open and inviting. At Furniture in Fashion we stock modern furniture for UK homes with free UK delivery, so it is straightforward to put a thoughtful scheme together without paying for shipping on top.
How much storage does a small child’s room actually need? Aim to cover three categories: clothing, toys and books. If each category has a defined home, the room will feel organised even on a busy weekend.
Is under bed storage safe for younger children? Yes, provided the drawers run smoothly and the bed is stable. Soft close runners and rounded handles are a sensible choice for younger users.
Should I buy storage that my child can grow with? Choosing pieces in calm, timeless finishes makes it easier to update the room as tastes change without replacing the furniture.
Where should I put a toy box in a small room? Along an empty wall or at the foot of the bed works well. Avoid placing it in front of windows or radiators.
How do I stop open shelves looking cluttered? Use a small number of matching baskets and group similar items together. Negative space between groups gives the eye a place to rest.
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