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How to Choose a Bookcase for a Home That Has Children

Why Choosing the Right Bookcase Matters in a Family Home

A bookcase in a family home is rarely just a place for books. It holds school folders, picture books, toy baskets, board games and the occasional model dinosaur. It also lives within reach of small climbing hands, which means safety has to come before aesthetics. Choosing well from the start saves you from upgrading later and gives the room a calmer feel. Our bookcases collection includes many of the formats discussed below, all designed with stability in mind.

Prioritise Stability Above All

The single most important factor in a family bookcase is how it copes with being pulled or climbed on. Look for a wide, stable base, ideally with a footprint deeper than 30cm. Avoid very tall narrow towers in rooms where younger children play, since they tip more easily even with wall fixings. Every bookcase should be secured to the wall using the supplied brackets, regardless of how heavy or stable it feels. Treat this as a non negotiable step rather than an optional extra.

Think About Edges and Corners

Sharp corners at toddler eye level cause more bumps than any other furniture issue in family homes. Look for bookcases with rounded edges, chamfered corners or recessed shelves. If the piece you love has square edges, soft corner protectors are widely available and easy to fit in minutes. Check that the protectors match the timber tone so they blend in rather than stand out.

Match Shelf Heights to Your Child

Children engage more with books they can reach. Position the lower three shelves at heights your child can use independently, with the most loved titles on the bottom row and rotating favourites on the next level up. Keep heirlooms, breakables and reference books on the top shelves where they belong to adults. This approach also helps children build the habit of tidying their own books at the end of the day.

Choose Materials That Will Last

Solid timber and high quality engineered wood both perform well in family homes. Solid wood shows knocks as part of its character and can be lightly sanded if it picks up serious marks. Engineered wood with a melamine or laminate finish wipes clean easily and resists sticky fingers. Avoid open backed bookcases on softer carpets, since the heavy load on small feet can dent flooring over time. Pair a sturdy bookcase with a smaller piece such as a child sized chair from our childrens chairs range to make the reading nook feel personal.

Add Closed Storage at the Bottom

Bookcases that combine open shelves above with closed cupboards or drawers below work beautifully in family rooms. The closed base holds toys, craft supplies and game boxes out of sight, while the open shelves above display books and a few treasured objects. This keeps the room visually calm even when the floor has just been tidied. Look at our wider childrens storage furniture collection for matching pieces that scale across a play area.

Plan for Growth

Children grow quickly, and their needs change with every school year. A bookcase that works for a four year old should also work for a ten year old. Look for adjustable shelves so you can switch from shorter picture books to taller school folders without buying a new piece. Neutral finishes such as oak, white or soft grey tend to age more gracefully than novelty themed designs that feel outgrown within a year or two.

Think About Light and Position

A reading corner in a bright spot of the room encourages children to use the bookcase rather than ignore it. Avoid placing books in direct sunlight, which can fade covers over time. A small floor lamp from our floor lamps selection adds warmth in the evening without adding clutter to the shelves.

Style with Restraint

Adult bookcases benefit from styling rules such as the 70 per cent fill rule, but in a family home a slightly fuller look is more honest and less likely to drive constant tidying. Use shallow fabric baskets on lower shelves to hide loose items, keep books spine forward where possible, and let one or two favourite objects share the space. Hidden behind closed cupboards, the messier supplies stay out of sight.

Frequently Asked Questions

What height bookcase is safest with small children?

Aim for under 150cm in rooms used by toddlers. Taller pieces are fine elsewhere as long as they are wall fixed.

Should I bolt every bookcase to the wall?

Yes, every freestanding bookcase in a family home should be secured. The brackets are supplied for exactly this reason.

Are open back bookcases safe for children?

Open backs are fine provided the unit is fixed to the wall. They allow easy cleaning and let books slot in fully without bumping the wall behind.

What is the most child friendly material?

Solid wood and quality engineered wood with a wipeable surface are the two best choices. Both tolerate the daily life of a family home with grace.

For more inspiration, explore the full collection at Furniture in Fashion, where you can shop modern furniture UK with free UK delivery.

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