Hallways set the mood of a home before any other room has a chance to. The choice between a bench and a console table often shapes that first moment, and many UK households find themselves weighing the two without a clear sense of which suits them. Both pieces solve real problems, yet they answer different questions about how a hallway is used day to day.
This guide walks through the practical points that matter most: space, lifestyle, storage and style. By the end, the right option for your home should feel obvious rather than guessed at.
Before considering shape or material, think about what happens in your hallway each morning and evening. If shoes pile up by the door, coats land on the banister and bags drop wherever there is space, a bench tends to earn its place quickly. It offers a spot to sit while lacing trainers, a surface for setting down post, and often hidden storage beneath the seat.
A console table speaks to a calmer routine. It suits homes where the hallway is more of a display zone than a launch pad, somewhere to set keys, a lamp and a small vase rather than a daily tumble of school bags. If your front door opens straight into a living space, a slim console can hint at a separate threshold without taking up much room.
UK hallways vary enormously. A Victorian terrace might offer a narrow corridor with barely enough room for a runner rug, while a 1990s semi can have a generous square at the foot of the stairs. Measure the width carefully and leave at least 80cm of clear walking space in front of any furniture you choose.
Benches generally sit between 35cm and 45cm deep, which suits tight corridors. A console table can be even slimmer, with some designs no more than 25cm deep. Browse our console tables collection to see how narrow profiles still deliver generous surface area.
Storage is where the two pieces differ most clearly. Benches with lift up seats or pull out drawers swallow shoes, gloves and dog leads with ease. Families with children often find a bench transforms the morning rush, since everything has a place rather than gathering on the floor.
Console tables offer storage too, just in a different form. Designs with shelves underneath hold woven baskets for hats and scarves, while versions with drawers tuck away keys, sunglasses and odd bits of paperwork. Our hallway storage furniture range covers both styles, so you can compare them side by side.
A bench tends to feel grounded and informal, which works in cottages, family homes and any space that leans towards a relaxed look. Upholstered tops in linen or velvet soften a hard floor, while wooden frames bring a touch of warmth to whiter walls.
Console tables carry a more formal note. Slim metal frames suit modern flats, mirrored finishes lift darker hallways, and high gloss versions feel crisp in newer builds. If a statement is what you are after, our decorative mirrors pair beautifully with a console to create a quick styling moment near the door.
Households shape this decision more than catalogue images do. If older relatives visit often, a bench gives them somewhere to sit while removing shoes. If you live alone and the hallway is mostly a route to the rest of the home, a console keeps the space feeling open and adult.
Pet owners often lean towards benches, since muddy paws and damp leads need a low surface and a place to dry off. Renters and downsizers often prefer consoles, since lighter pieces move easily and rarely block a tight entrance.
There is no rule that says it must be one or the other. Longer hallways can hold a bench on one wall and a slim console opposite, giving you seating, storage and surface space without crowding. Even in shorter spaces, a low bench tucked beneath a wall mounted shelf delivers a similar split of functions.
We stock a wide range of modern furniture across the UK at Furniture in Fashion, with free UK delivery on every order. Whether you settle on a bench, a console or a thoughtful pairing, the right piece will quietly improve how your hallway works.
A slim console usually wins in very tight corridors, since some designs are only 25cm deep. A compact bench works well if you have at least 40cm of depth to spare.
Upholstered benches feel softer and warmer, though wooden tops are easy to wipe clean. A loose cushion adds comfort without committing to a fixed fabric.
Yes, if it has open shelves or generous space beneath the surface. Pair it with a low woven basket to keep pairs tidy and out of sight.
It helps for finishes to feel related rather than identical. A shared timber tone or metal colour creates a sense of flow from the front door inwards.
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