A rug is one of the few things in a living room that touches almost everything else. It sits under the sofa, frames the coffee table and defines where the seating area begins. Get it right and the whole room feels pulled together. Get it wrong, usually by going too small, and the space can feel disjointed no matter how good the furniture is. UK interior designers spend a surprising amount of time on rugs for exactly this reason.
A rug also does quiet practical work. It warms a cold floor underfoot, softens the echo in a hard surfaced room and protects flooring from wear in the busiest spots. In a country where laminate and wood floors are common and winters are long, those benefits matter as much as the looks. The eight tips below distil the advice designers give most often. They apply to compact flats and larger family rooms alike, and they focus on the choices that make the biggest difference. You can browse shapes, sizes and textures in the rugs range while you read.
The most common rug mistake is choosing one that is too small. A rug that floats in the middle of the floor with furniture marooned around it makes a room feel fragmented. Designers prefer a rug large enough that at least the front legs of the sofa and chairs sit on it. This visually links the seating into one zone. When people are unsure between two sizes, the larger one almost always looks better, because a generous rug makes a room feel considered while a small one looks lost.
Aim to leave a similar gap of bare floor around the edge of the rug on all sides, often somewhere around twenty to forty centimetres depending on the room. An even border frames the rug like a mat frames a picture and keeps the layout looking deliberate. An uneven border, with the rug almost touching one wall and far from another, is one of those small things that makes a room feel slightly off without people knowing why.
A rug should gather the sofa and chairs rather than sit apart from them. In a large open plan room, a generous rug under the whole seating group marks out the lounge area and separates it from the dining or walkway space. This is one of the easiest ways to zone an open space, and it gives a big room a sense of structure that walls alone cannot provide.
Texture changes how a rug feels underfoot and how it copes with use. A flat weave is easy to clean and suits busy households, while a deeper pile feels cosy and soft but needs more care. Match the texture to the way the room is used rather than choosing on looks alone. A beautiful high pile rug in a hallway or a pet heavy home can quickly look tired, so being honest about daily life saves disappointment later.
In a fairly plain room, a patterned rug can be the main event, adding colour and interest at floor level without crowding the walls or surfaces. In a busy room with lots going on, a quieter rug calms things down. Decide which job the rug needs to do before you choose. A patterned rug also has the practical advantage of hiding the odd mark, which is useful in a family setting.
The rug and the sofa are the two largest soft elements in most living rooms, so they should agree with each other. Pull a tone from the rug into a cushion on the sofa, or choose a rug that picks up the undertone of your upholstery. Cool grey upholstery sits well with cool toned rugs, while warmer fabrics suit warmer rugs, and getting these undertones to agree quietly lifts the whole room. The sofa furniture range shows how different fabrics read against floor colours.
A pad under the rug stops it from slipping and adds a little cushioning, which protects both the rug and the floor. It also stops the edges from curling, which is a small detail that makes a rug look much better cared for over time. On hard floors a pad is close to essential, both for safety and for keeping the rug in place as people move across it.
The coffee table usually sits in the centre of the rug, so think about how the two relate. The table should sit comfortably within the rug with room to walk around, and the rug should be large enough that the table never tips off the edge. A table with two legs on and two off looks unsettled. Compare proportions in the coffee tables range to find a balance that works.
A rug is rarely a standalone decision. It works with the sofa, the lighting and the colour of the walls, so it pays to think about the room as a whole. Designers often choose the rug fairly early because it sets the palette for everything else, from cushions to curtains. If you start with a rug you love, the rest of the room has a natural anchor to build around.
It is also worth thinking long term. A neutral rug with a subtle texture is easier to live with through changing tastes than a bold pattern you may tire of. If you want colour, a cushion or a throw is a cheaper thing to change later. For a wider view of how rugs sit with seating and storage, the living room furniture collection from Furniture in Fashion shows the pieces together, and free UK delivery makes it easy to bring the look home.
Styling and upkeep go together with rugs. Even the best chosen rug looks neglected if it is left to gather dust or curl at the corners. Vacuum regularly in the direction of the pile, rotate the rug now and then so it wears evenly and deal with spills quickly before they set. A rug pad helps here too, since a rug that stays flat and in place simply looks cared for. These small habits keep a rug looking smart for years and protect the investment you made in choosing the right one.
One habit designers carry into rug styling is thinking about the seasons. A living room that feels right in deep winter, with a soft rug underfoot and throws layered nearby, can feel heavy by midsummer. You do not need to swap the rug itself, but the way you dress around it can shift with the year. In the colder months, lean into texture and warmth with chunky cushions and a folded blanket close to the seating. As the weather warms, lighten the surrounding accessories so the room breathes more easily, and let the rug sit with fewer competing layers.
This seasonal thinking also extends to colour. A rug in a warm neutral works year round, but the cushions and art around it can move from rich, deep tones in winter to lighter, fresher shades in spring. Because the rug is the largest soft element in the room, keeping it neutral and changing the smaller pieces around it is an affordable way to keep a living room feeling current through the whole year. It is a designer trick that costs very little yet keeps a space from ever feeling stuck in one mood.
Large enough that at least the front legs of your sofa and armchairs sit on it. A rug that is too small makes the room feel disconnected, so when in doubt, size up.
Not necessarily. Having all legs on the rug looks generous in a large room, while front legs on the rug works well in smaller spaces. The key is that the rug links the seating together.
Use a rug pad underneath. It grips the floor, stops the rug from sliding, adds cushioning and helps keep the edges flat.
A flat weave or a low pile is practical for busy households because it is easier to clean and copes well with daily traffic. Deep pile feels luxurious but needs more upkeep.
Either can work. A rug that contrasts with the floor stands out and defines the seating area, while a rug close in tone feels softer and more seamless. Choose based on whether you want the rug to be a feature or a quiet backdrop.
A pedestal lifts a vase, plant or sculpture to eye level and turns it into…
Accessories often come last when furnishing a first home, yet a good vase is one…
A decorative mirror gives back light, depth and a sense of space for very little…
Glass may look like a single neutral material, but a glass side table comes in…
A wall mirror adds light and a sense of space to any room, and for…
A glass console table brings a light, airy feel to hallways and living rooms, but…
This website uses cookies.