Categories: Dining Room

How to Choose Between a Round and Oval Dining Table

Two shapes, two different rooms

Choosing between a round and an oval dining table is rarely about which is more attractive. Both can be beautiful. The decision is about how the table will sit within your room, how many people you usually feed, and how the table will work in everyday life. A round and an oval may look like cousins, but they behave quite differently once they are placed in a real home. Working through a few simple questions tends to make the choice clearer than weighing up styling alone.

The basic difference between the two shapes

A round table is exactly what it sounds like. A circular top, usually supported by a single pedestal or four legs, that is the same width in every direction. An oval is essentially a round table that has been stretched. It keeps the soft curves on the short ends but offers a longer central section that seats more people. Practically speaking, a round table behaves like a four seater that can occasionally take a fifth. An oval behaves like a six or eight seater with softer edges than a rectangle.

When a round table makes sense

Round tables suit smaller rooms, especially square ones. They have no corners to negotiate and people can walk around them freely, which keeps a tight floor plan from feeling congested. Conversation flows easily because every diner can see every other diner. This makes round tables a strong choice for households who entertain in small groups or who use the dining table for board games and lingering coffees.

They also pair well with pedestal bases, which remove the visual clutter of four legs and make it easier to slide chairs in from any angle. If you are working with a compact dining zone, browsing the dining tables range filtered to round designs gives a useful sense of the diameters available.

When an oval table makes sense

Ovals come into their own when you need to seat more people without losing the softness of a curved table. The longer central section will comfortably take six diners and can stretch to eight on busier evenings. Because the ends are still curved, you can usually fit an extra chair at either end without anyone feeling pinched at a corner. Ovals also tend to suit longer rooms, since their proportions line up neatly with the natural lines of the space.

If your family or social numbers vary from week to week, an oval extending table offers even more flexibility. Our extending dining tables include oval shapes that close down to a compact daily size and open out when needed.

Comparing seating capacity

For everyday planning, a round table of 90 to 100cm in diameter seats four. A 120cm round seats up to six if you choose slim chairs and accept a closer fit. Beyond about 130cm a round table becomes difficult to use, because people sit too far from one another to talk easily.

Ovals are more generous. A 160cm oval seats six comfortably. A 200cm oval seats eight, and with a slight squeeze at either end can take ten on special occasions. If you regularly host more than six, the oval is usually the easier shape to live with.

Considering the shape of your room

Look at the room from above. Square rooms tend to flatter round tables, while long or rectangular rooms read more naturally with an oval. Open plan kitchens are an interesting case. If the dining zone sits within a wider open space, a round table can mark a calm, contained area, almost like an island. If the zone is set along one side of the room with traffic moving past, an oval lines up better with the flow.

Whichever shape you choose, allow at least 80cm of clearance around every side so that chairs can be pulled out without colliding with walls or furniture.

Materials and bases

Both shapes are available across the full range of finishes. Tempered glass and clear acrylic keep the room feeling light, which can help round tables in particular avoid dominating a small space. Solid wood, marble and sintered stone give an oval a sense of weight that suits longer rooms.

For round designs, a pedestal base is often the most useful structurally, since it allows seating all the way around without anyone straddling a leg. For ovals, twin pedestals or splayed legs tend to give the most comfortable knee room along the longer sides. If you would like to compare wooden options, our wooden dining tables collection includes both shapes at Furniture in Fashion.

A few practical things to check

Before deciding, measure the longest run of clear floor in the room and subtract twice the 80cm clearance figure. Whatever remains is the longest table you can sensibly fit. Check that the table can pass through the doorway, and confirm that any extensions can be operated without moving the table away from the wall.

FAQ

Which shape is better for small homes?

A round table usually suits a small home more easily because it has no corners and people can move around it from any direction. An oval can still work if the room is longer than it is wide.

How many people can sit at a 120cm round table?

Four people sit very comfortably at a 120cm round table. Six is possible with slim chairs and a closer arrangement, although conversation can become a little snug.

Are oval tables harder to find in extending designs?

Not at all. Oval extending tables are widely available and often more popular than rectangular extenders because the curved ends remain comfortable when the table is open.

Does the base shape really matter?

Yes. A pedestal base on a round table makes seating flexible because there are no legs to navigate. On an oval, splayed or twin pedestals give the most comfortable knee room across the longer sides.

Should the dining chairs follow the table shape?

Curved chair backs tend to flatter round and oval tables, since the soft outline echoes the table edge. That said, straight backed chairs can work well too if you would like more contrast.

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