Categories: Children's Furniture

How to Anchor Furniture Safely in a UK Children’s Bedroom

A child’s bedroom is a place for sleeping, playing and growing, so the furniture inside it needs to feel as steady as it looks. Many UK homes have tall storage pieces that sit perfectly still during the day, yet a curious toddler who climbs a drawer front or pulls on a shelf can change the balance in a moment. Anchoring furniture to the wall removes that risk and gives parents real peace of mind.

Why anchoring matters in family bedrooms

Young children explore with their whole bodies. They climb, they hang and they tug, often using furniture as a ladder to reach something just out of view. Tall units such as wardrobes, bookcases and chests carry most of their weight up high, which makes them more likely to lean forward when a child pulls on an open drawer or door. Securing these pieces to the wall keeps the weight where it belongs and stops the whole unit from tipping towards your child.

At Furniture in Fashion we design our bedroom ranges with stability in mind, but anchoring is the final step that turns a sturdy piece into a genuinely safe one. It takes a few minutes and protects your family for years.

Which pieces need anchoring first

Start with anything tall, top heavy or easy to climb. A children’s chest of drawers is a common worry because every open drawer shifts weight forward and creates a ready made step. Tall children’s wardrobes and open bookcases follow close behind, since both invite climbing and both hold weight high above the floor. Work through the room from tallest to shortest so the most pressing risks are dealt with early.

How to anchor furniture step by step

Good anchoring is simple when you take it in order. The aim is a firm link between the back of the unit and a solid part of the wall.

Find the right fixing point

Locate the studs in a stud wall using a detector, or use suitable heavy duty plugs in a masonry wall. Fixing into a stud or solid brick gives the strongest hold. Avoid screwing into plasterboard alone, as it can pull away under pressure.

Use the correct straps and brackets

Many pieces come with anti tip straps, brackets or restraints. Fit these to the upper section of the unit so the top is held back against the wall. If a fixing kit is missing, choose metal brackets or webbing straps rated for furniture rather than light picture hooks.

Check the unit sits flush and level

Push the piece back so it rests flat against the skirting and wall. A unit that leans even slightly forward is already working against you. Level it with small packers at the base if your floor is uneven, then tighten the fixings fully.

Reduce the climbing temptation

Anchoring is your main defence, yet a few habits help too. Place heavier items in lower drawers so the base stays weighted, keep toys and treats off the top surface, and store tempting objects within easy reach rather than high up. A tidy children’s storage setup means your child has less reason to climb in the first place.

Looking after fixings over time

Walls, screws and straps can loosen as a house settles and as children grow stronger. Check every anchor point a few times a year and after you move any furniture. Retighten anything that has worked loose and replace straps that look worn. A quick seasonal check keeps the whole room reliable.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to anchor furniture if my child is still a baby? Yes. Anchoring before your child starts to crawl and climb means the room is ready as soon as they become mobile, which often happens sooner than parents expect.

Can I anchor furniture in a rented UK home? In most cases you can, though it is wise to ask your landlord first. The small screw holes left behind are easy to fill and are usually welcomed as a safety measure.

What if my walls are plasterboard? Fix into the timber studs behind the plasterboard wherever possible, or use heavy duty cavity fixings designed for the load. Plasterboard alone is not strong enough to hold a tipping unit.

How often should I check the anchors? Aim for two or three checks a year and always after rearranging the room. Children grow and pull harder over time, so regular checks keep the fixings dependable.

Anchoring is one of the easiest ways to make a child’s bedroom feel calm and secure. Choose sturdy pieces, fix them properly to the wall and keep an eye on the fittings as the years pass, and you create a space where your child can play and rest in safety.

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