The console table is the workhorse of the British hallway. It catches keys, post, and the bag you forgot you needed. It holds a lamp that softens the evening light. It anchors a wall that would otherwise read as empty. In a narrow hallway, however, the wrong console can quickly tip the space from useful to obstructed.
Choosing well is a matter of measurement, proportion, and material. Here is how we approach the decision when planning an entrance that has very little room to spare.
The most common mistake we see is choosing a console for the wall length, then realising it eats into the route to the kitchen or the stairs. Start by marking the walking line, the path a person takes from the front door to the rest of the home. That line should never be narrower than 60cm to feel comfortable, ideally closer to 75cm.
Once the route is settled, the remaining width tells you the maximum depth of the console. In most UK hallways that figure lands between 18cm and 28cm.
A console should sit in proportion to the wall it occupies. As a rule of thumb, leave at least 20cm of clear wall either side of the table. A piece that runs almost the full length of the wall reads as a fitted unit, while a piece that floats in the middle can look unmoored.
Period properties tend to suit a softer line, perhaps a turned leg or a curved edge. New builds and modern flats sit comfortably with cleaner geometry, often in matte timber, painted finish, or high gloss. Glass and mirrored consoles disappear visually, which is a quiet trick for very narrow runs.
If you prefer a warmer feel, a piece from our wooden console tables selection adds grain and weight without dominating the space.
A console with a single drawer is enough for keys, glasses, and a notebook. Two drawers give room for letters and chargers. A shelf beneath is useful for a basket of slippers or a stack of folded newspapers, though it can read as cluttered if left open.
In hallways that already have a cupboard or a bench, a slim console with no storage is often the calmer choice. The point of the table in that case is composition rather than function.
A hallway sees damp coats, muddy paws, and the occasional brush from a passing rucksack. Lacquered wood, painted MDF with a tough finish, and toughened glass all stand up well. Untreated raw woods such as natural oak look beautiful for a season, then start to mark. If you love the look, ask whether the finish is sealed.
The full range of console tables at Furniture in Fashion includes finishes that suit British weather and family use.
A console below a mirror is a classic combination for good reason. The mirror lifts the eye, reflects whatever light is available, and serves a practical role as the final glance before leaving the house. Hang the mirror with its centre at roughly 155cm from the floor, which suits most household heights.
A landscape wall mirror works well above a long console. A round or portrait shape suits a shorter table.
Three to five objects is usually the right number. A lamp at one end, a small tray for keys, a low ceramic vase. Leave room for the bag that lands there on a busy day. Overstyled consoles tend to migrate into kitchen surfaces within a fortnight, which is rarely the look anyone is after.
Repeat the materials elsewhere in the home where you can. A brass tray on the console echoed by a brass pendant in the kitchen reads as quiet continuity. A ceramic from the same maker on a side table in the lounge ties the two rooms together.
If you are planning a fresh entrance and want to shop modern furniture UK styled for British homes, you can buy furniture from Furniture in Fashion with free UK delivery.
A depth of 18cm to 22cm still gives a usable surface, especially with wall mounted versions that have no front legs to clip against shoulders.
Not necessarily. A console that picks up the floor tone or the stair handrail often sits more naturally than one matched to the door colour.
A lamp adds warmth on dim winter evenings and reduces reliance on the ceiling light, which can feel harsh in a small hallway.
Glass recedes visually, which suits tight spaces. Wood adds character. Both can work, the choice depends on the rest of the home.
Corners are the most overlooked part of any room, often left empty or used as…
Getting the scale of furniture right is the quiet reason some rooms feel comfortable and…
Renovating a UK home is rarely done all at once. Most households work through it…
Shelving can be one of the most useful features in a UK living room or…
Living in a small UK home does not mean compromising on comfort or style. From…
New build homes across the UK offer a tempting blank slate, with crisp walls, level…
This website uses cookies.