The most common mistake people make with a coffee station is forgetting about height. A cabinet can look ideal in a photo and still fail in real life if the machine does not fit beneath the shelf above, or if filling the water tank means lifting it awkwardly each morning. Getting the proportions right is what makes a station genuinely pleasant to use.
Before you look at any cabinet, measure your coffee machine in three ways. Its standing height, its height with the lid or bean hopper fully open, and the clearance it needs to slide the drip tray or portafilter in and out. Bean to cup machines in particular need headroom above for the lid to lift. Write these numbers down, as they decide which cabinet will actually work. Our sideboard furniture listings include dimensions so you can match them to your machine.
If you want a shelf or cabinet above the machine, the clear space between the work surface and that shelf is the figure that matters most. Leave enough room not only for the machine but for the steam and the action of opening it. A cramped gap traps moisture and makes daily use a chore. Where headroom is tight, an open topped unit avoids the problem entirely, and our sideboards offer flat topped designs that give the machine all the space it needs above.
The surface height affects comfort just as much as machine clearance. A top that sits too low means stooping, while one that is too high makes tamping and pouring awkward. Standard worktop height of around ninety centimetres suits most people, so look for a cabinet that lands near that figure if it stands alone. A piece that matches your existing counter creates a seamless line and feels natural to use.
Many machines fill from the top or have a tank that lifts out from above. Check that you can do this without removing the machine from the cabinet. The same applies to topping up beans. If the hopper opens upward, you need clearance to reach it. A station that forces you to drag the machine forward every morning quickly becomes frustrating, so choose your height with these daily actions in mind.
Once the height works, the storage beneath the surface earns its keep. Drawers and cupboards hold pods, beans, filters and spare cups out of sight. A cabinet with a glass front can display nicer cups while keeping the clutter contained, and our display cabinets strike that balance well. Furniture in Fashion offers a wide range of cabinets on sale with free UK delivery, and you can shop the full collection at Furniture in Fashion.
A coffee station that fits your machine and your height is a joy to use every day, while one that ignores those measurements becomes a daily irritation. Measure the machine, allow proper clearance above, aim for a comfortable surface height and make sure you can fill the tank and beans easily. Get those right and the cabinet will serve you well for years.
Height is only half the story, as the space around the machine matters too. A coffee machine in daily use needs room at the sides to reach the buttons, swing out a portafilter or refill the water from a jug. Pushed tight into a corner or hemmed in by jars, even a perfectly sized machine becomes fiddly to operate. When planning the cabinet, picture the full sequence of making a cup, from filling and grinding to pouring and cleaning, and make sure each step has space. A surface that allows a clear working zone beside the machine keeps the routine smooth and stops the corner from feeling cramped. Good clearance, both above and around, is what separates a station you enjoy from one you tolerate.
How much clearance does a coffee machine need above it? Allow enough room for the machine plus the full opening of its lid or bean hopper, with a little extra for steam. Always measure with the lid open, not closed.
What surface height suits a standalone coffee cabinet? Around ninety centimetres works for most people, matching standard worktop height so pouring and tamping feel comfortable rather than a stretch or a stoop.
Why does machine height get overlooked so often? Cabinets are usually chosen on looks and width, while the vertical clearance for filling the tank and opening the lid is easy to forget until the machine is in place.
Is an open top better than a shelf above? If headroom is tight, yes. A flat topped unit removes the risk of a cramped gap and lets steam escape, making daily use far easier.
The hallway is the first room anyone sees, yet it is often the last to…
British light is famously changeable, and a finish that looks warm in afternoon daylight can…
Family life rarely stands still, and a living room that suited a couple soon adapts…
The living room is still the heart of most UK homes, and in 2026 the…
In a small UK home, every piece of furniture has to justify the space it…
Finishing a proper clear out leaves a home feeling lighter, but without the right storage…
This website uses cookies.