The wardrobe usually gets all the attention when people plan bedroom storage, but it rarely solves the whole problem on its own. Hanging space takes care of suits, dresses and longer coats, yet most of what we keep in a bedroom is folded, bulky or seasonal. A wardrobe alone leaves jumpers stacked too high, bedding squeezed onto the top shelf and accessories scattered across surfaces. Looking beyond the wardrobe is how a UK bedroom starts to feel genuinely calm.
Before choosing furniture, take stock of what needs storing. Folded clothes, shoes, bedding, books, paperwork and seasonal items all need different spaces. A bedroom that works for one person may struggle for two. Listing the categories that overflow your current wardrobe is the quickest way to identify which extra pieces will help most. From there, the choice between a chest of drawers, an ottoman, a blanket box or a dressing table becomes a practical question rather than a stylistic one.
A chest of drawers handles folded clothing better than any wardrobe shelf. Three to six drawers give clear sections for jumpers, shirts, underwear and trousers. In a UK bedroom where the wardrobe is shared, a chest of drawers per person often resolves the daily crowding around the rail. Our chest of drawers range includes wooden, high gloss and mirrored options, so the piece can sit comfortably beside almost any bed. For a coordinated finish across the room, the wider bedroom collections bring drawers and cabinets together as a set.
An ottoman at the foot of the bed solves the problem of bedding, throws and seasonal items. It also doubles as a bench for putting on shoes. A blanket box performs the same role with a more traditional silhouette and often suits cottages, period homes and country style bedrooms. Browse our blanket box selection if you want a piece that closes a room visually as well as storing extras out of sight.
Accessories cause more visual clutter than clothes. Watches, jewellery, glasses, perfumes and skincare quickly take over a chest of drawers if there is no dedicated home for them. A dressing table contains this routine in one place, with a mirror that often replaces a separate wall mirror. It also gives a quiet corner for getting ready, which can ease shared bedrooms in busy UK households. Our dressing tables include compact designs for smaller rooms and wider pieces for primary bedrooms.
Bedside cabinets often go unused beyond a lamp and a phone charger. Choose a design with two or three drawers and you gain storage for medication, books, journals and the small items that otherwise drift onto open surfaces. The wider bedside cabinets range covers slimline, mirrored and high gloss options, all of which can free up space elsewhere in the room.
Many UK bedrooms run shorter than they do wide, especially in terraces and flats. Tall, narrow furniture uses height that would otherwise sit empty above a chest of drawers. A tallboy chest, a slim shelving unit or a single door wardrobe can fit into corners that wider pieces cannot reach. Wall mounted shelves above a chest of drawers add a layer of storage without taking floor space. The aim is always to keep the floor visible, since a clear floor is what makes a bedroom feel restful.
A bench at the foot of the bed is a classic editorial detail in interiors magazines, and there is a practical reason for it. Beyond styling, the bench gives you somewhere to sit while dressing and a place to drop tomorrow’s clothes overnight. Choose a bench with a hinged seat for hidden storage, ideal for spare pillows or a winter duvet. This works particularly well with our wooden beds, where the timber finish ties the room together.
The strongest UK bedrooms tend to layer several smaller storage pieces rather than relying on one oversized wardrobe. A wardrobe for hanging items, a chest of drawers for folded clothes, a bedside cabinet for daily essentials and an ottoman for seasonal pieces is far more flexible than a single large unit. Layered storage also looks more considered, since each piece has its own role rather than competing for the same items.
Storage only works when it is used. Edit twice a year, ideally in spring and autumn. Move out of season clothes into the ottoman or blanket box, return current pieces to easy reach and donate anything you have not worn in twelve months. The most expensive storage in the world cannot compensate for too many possessions, and a bedroom always rewards the discipline of keeping less.
For most adults, yes. Wardrobes handle hanging items well but are inefficient for folded clothing. A chest of drawers takes pressure off shelves and keeps the wardrobe usable.
At the foot of the bed if there is space, or against an empty wall. Avoid placing it directly in front of a radiator, since this blocks the heat from circulating.
They are highly practical when accessories pile up elsewhere. Even a small dressing table can absorb the items that otherwise sprawl across a chest of drawers.
Vertical pieces such as tallboys, narrow shelving units and wall mounted shelves use unused height without taking extra floor space.
Keep finishes within a coordinated palette and leave at least one wall mostly clear. Visual breathing space matters as much as storage capacity.
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