Living rooms in the UK are asked to do a great deal. They host quiet evenings, family gatherings, remote working and the slow accumulation of books, blankets and gadgets that fill any busy home. As floor space stays tight in terraced houses and new build flats alike, storage has quietly become the feature that decides whether a room feels calm or cramped. In 2026, the most useful pieces are the ones that hide everyday clutter while still looking considered.
The shift this year is away from bulky standalone cabinets and towards furniture that earns its place in more than one way. A console with deep drawers, a coffee table with a hidden shelf, a media unit that swallows cables and remotes. When you plan a room around what you actually own, you stop buying storage for the sake of it. Start by listing what needs a home, then choose pieces that match those quantities rather than guessing. Our wider living room furniture range is a sensible starting point when you want to see how different shapes sit together.
A sideboard remains one of the most practical things you can add to a living room. It offers a long surface for lamps and ceramics while concealing board games, paperwork and spare cushions behind closed doors. In smaller rooms a low, slim profile keeps sight lines open, which makes the whole space feel larger. Many UK homes now place a sideboard along the longest wall and treat the top as a display ledge. If you want a single piece that balances looks and capacity, browse the sideboard furniture options and pay attention to internal shelving rather than only the outside finish.
Televisions have grown, but the clutter around them has shrunk to soundbars, streaming boxes and a tangle of cables. A well chosen unit keeps all of this tidy and at the right height for comfortable viewing. Closed compartments hide the technology, while open shelves suit speakers that need airflow. Measure the screen and the wall before you commit, since a unit that is too narrow looks unbalanced. The TV units collection covers compact widths for flats as well as longer designs for open plan rooms.
When the floor is full, the walls are your best friend. Tall bookcases draw the eye upward and create generous storage without eating into the footprint of the room. They suit period homes with high ceilings and work just as well in modern boxes where every centimetre counts. Mix closed bases with open upper shelves so that frequently used items stay reachable while less attractive clutter stays out of sight. Have a look at the bookcases on offer if you want to free up surfaces elsewhere in the room.
Storage furniture should survive years of daily use, so material matters as much as style. Solid wood and quality engineered boards cope well with knocks, while tempered glass tops resist marks and clean easily. Soft close hinges and full extension runners make drawers a pleasure rather than a chore. If you live with children or pets, rounded edges and durable finishes save a lot of worry. Across our dedicated storage furniture selection you will find pieces designed for the way British homes are really used, and everything ships with free UK delivery from Furniture in Fashion.
The best storage plan is the one you will actually keep up. Choose two or three considered pieces rather than a dozen small ones, give every category a home, and leave a little room to grow. A living room that breathes is far more relaxing than one packed with cupboards. With the right mix of sideboard, media unit and shelving, even a modest UK room can stay tidy through the busiest weeks of the year.
How much storage does a small living room need? Focus on one larger piece, such as a sideboard, plus a coffee table with a hidden shelf. This usually covers everyday clutter without crowding the room.
Are open shelves or closed cabinets better? A mix works best. Use closed doors for items you want hidden and open shelves for books and pieces you are happy to display.
What height should a media unit be? Aim for a screen centre that sits near eye level when you are seated, which usually means a unit between forty and sixty centimetres tall.
Does storage furniture suit period homes? Yes. Tall bookcases make use of high ceilings, while slim sideboards respect the proportions of older rooms.
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