Pairing a TV unit with a sideboard is one of the easiest ways to give a living room a pulled together look. When the two pieces share a finish or a clear design language, the room feels considered rather than assembled from odds and ends. The combination also solves a common UK problem, which is finding enough storage in a room that has to hold media, books, glassware and the general clutter of daily life. Get the pairing right and you gain both order and a sense of calm.
A TV unit sits low and wide to support the screen, while a sideboard stands taller and offers deeper storage. Together they cover different needs without competing. The low unit keeps the television grounded, and the sideboard provides height and presence on another wall, balancing the room. Choosing both from the same family means the proportions and details echo each other, which is what makes the space feel coordinated. Start by browsing our TV units and sideboards to see which ranges offer matching pieces.
The pieces do not have to be a perfect match. In fact, a little variation often looks more natural. Share one common thread, such as the same wood tone, the same handle style or the same leg design, and let the rest differ. A high gloss TV unit can sit happily with a high gloss sideboard in the same colour, while a wooden pairing feels warm and grounded. If you like a sleek modern scheme, our high gloss TV stands coordinate neatly with gloss sideboards for a crisp, reflective finish.
Think about where each piece will sit before you buy. The TV unit usually faces the main seating, while the sideboard often works on a side or rear wall where it can be seen and used without blocking the screen. Leave enough clear floor between them so the room does not feel boxed in. In open plan spaces, a sideboard can even mark the edge between the living and dining areas, giving the room gentle structure.
Use the pairing to divide your storage sensibly. Keep media devices, games and remotes in the TV unit, since that is where you use them, and reserve the sideboard for glassware, table linen, books or anything you would rather keep out of the main sightline. This division stops either piece becoming overstuffed and makes everything easier to find. If you entertain, a sideboard near the dining area doubles as a serving surface, and you might pair it with a drinks cabinet for a sociable corner.
Once the furniture is in place, style the surfaces so they speak to each other without matching exactly. Repeat a colour or material across both, perhaps a ceramic vase on the sideboard echoed by a similar tone near the television. Keep the TV unit fairly clear so the screen remains the focus, and let the sideboard carry a little more decoration, such as a lamp, a plant or framed photographs. The result is a room that feels layered and intentional.
Buying both pieces at once means you can be confident they will work together for years, even if you redecorate. Neutral finishes age well and adapt to changing colour schemes, while classic shapes avoid looking dated. Investing in a coordinated pair often makes more sense than buying single pieces over time and hoping they match.
The two pieces should feel in proportion with each other and with the room. In a larger living room, a substantial sideboard balances a wide TV unit and fills the space comfortably. In a smaller room, choose a more compact sideboard so the pair does not crowd the floor or block natural paths through the space. Measure both walls and picture how the pieces relate across the room before you buy, since a sideboard that overwhelms one wall can throw the whole balance off, no matter how well it matches the television unit. Explore the full collection at Furniture in Fashion, where modern living room furniture ships with free UK delivery.
Do my TV unit and sideboard need to match exactly? No. Sharing one common element such as wood tone, handle style or leg design is enough. A little variation often looks more natural than an identical pair.
Where should the sideboard go in relation to the TV unit? The TV unit faces the main seating, while the sideboard usually works best on a side or rear wall where it is visible and useful without blocking the screen.
How should I split storage between the two? Keep media and devices in the TV unit and use the sideboard for glassware, linen, books and items you prefer out of the main sightline.
Is it better to buy both pieces together? Buying a coordinated pair at once gives you confidence they will work together for years and avoids the difficulty of matching separate pieces later.
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