A living room rarely stays still. It hosts quiet evenings, weekend guests, and the slow build up of remotes, chargers, candles and the occasional board game. A sideboard absorbs all of that without asking for attention. In 2026 the strongest designs lean towards low profiles, soft handles and finishes that sit calmly against painted walls. Rather than dominating a room, a good sideboard gives it a settled base line, a place where storage and display can happen in the same breath.
Across UK homes the trend has moved away from heavy units towards pieces that feel lighter on their feet. Slim legs, recessed bases and matte surfaces all help a sideboard read as furniture rather than bulk. If you are refreshing a room this year, this is the piece that quietly ties everything together.
Finish does most of the work in a modern living room. Warm timber brings texture and a grounded feel, which works well in rooms with plenty of neutral paint and natural light. Our range of wooden sideboards covers everything from pale oak tones to deeper walnut shades, so you can match the warmth already present in your floors or beams.
If your scheme leans cooler and more graphic, a lacquered surface reflects light and keeps the room feeling open. The high gloss sideboards we stock bounce daylight across a space, which is useful in flats and terraces where windows are limited. The reflective quality adds depth without adding a single extra colour to your palette.
Scale is where many living rooms go wrong. A sideboard that is too tall competes with the sofa, while one that is too short looks lost beneath a large wall. As a general guide, keep the top of the unit roughly in line with the back of your seating, so the eye travels smoothly around the room. Leave a clear stretch of wall above it for art or a mirror, and resist the urge to crowd the top surface.
Width matters too. In an average UK living room a unit between 120cm and 160cm tends to feel generous without blocking walkways. Always measure the route from your front door to the chosen wall, since a wide sideboard can be surprisingly tricky to manoeuvre through narrow hallways.
The point of a sideboard is calm storage. Closed cupboards hide the clutter you would rather not see, while a run of drawers keeps smaller items sorted and reachable. Think about what actually lives in your living room before you choose. Households with children often value deep cupboards for toys, while those who entertain may prefer drawers for table linen and serving pieces.
A sideboard also takes pressure off other parts of the room. If your shelving is overflowing, browsing the wider living room furniture collection alongside your sideboard choice can help you plan storage as a whole rather than buying in isolation.
Once the unit is in place, styling should feel relaxed. Group objects in odd numbers, vary the heights, and leave breathing space between pieces. A single tall lamp, a low bowl and a stack of books will usually look more considered than a row of small ornaments. If you display anything seasonal, swap it out rather than adding to it, so the surface never feels crowded.
When you are weighing up designs, look past the photograph and consider the daily reality. Check how the doors open, whether the drawers run smoothly, and how the finish copes with fingerprints in a busy home. Browsing the full sideboard furniture range lets you compare timber, gloss and mixed material designs side by side, which makes the decision far easier. You can shop modern furniture across the UK with free delivery when you buy from Furniture in Fashion.
Aim for a height that sits roughly level with the back of your sofa, usually around 75cm to 85cm. This keeps the room balanced and leaves room above for art or a mirror.
Both suit modern schemes. Wood adds warmth and texture, while gloss reflects light and feels crisp. Choose based on whether your room needs softening or brightening.
Try to leave a clear stretch of wall above the unit and at least a little space at each side, so it reads as a deliberate feature rather than a tight fit.
Yes. Many low sideboards are well suited to holding a television, with cupboards below for devices, provided the width and cable access work for your setup.
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