A sideboard can transform a room or quietly throw it off balance, and size is usually the reason. Too large and it crowds the space and blocks movement. Too small and it looks lost against a broad wall. Getting the proportions right is the single most important decision you will make, and it is one that a little planning makes simple.
UK rooms vary enormously, from compact flats to generous period houses, so there is no single correct measurement. Instead, the right size depends on the wall, the surrounding furniture and the way you move through the space. This guide walks through each step.
Begin by measuring the wall where the sideboard will sit. Note the full width, then subtract a comfortable margin at each end so the unit does not run wall to wall, which can look tight. As a rough rule, a sideboard that fills around two thirds of a wall tends to feel well balanced.
Just as important is the journey from your front door to that wall. Measure doorways, hallways and any tight turns, since a wide unit that fits the wall perfectly is no use if it cannot get into the room. This is easy to overlook and a common cause of disappointment. Checking dimensions carefully within the sideboard furniture range before you order saves a great deal of trouble.
Height shapes how a sideboard feels. In a living room, a unit that sits roughly level with the back of the sofa keeps sight lines calm. In a dining room, a height that aligns loosely with the table top helps the pieces relate to one another. Lower ceilings call for lower units, while taller rooms can carry a little more height.
Leave clear wall space above the unit for art or a mirror. A sideboard with a generous gap above it reads as a deliberate feature, whereas one squeezed beneath a shelf can feel cramped.
Depth is the measurement people forget, yet it decides how easily you move around a room. Most sideboards sit between 40cm and 50cm deep. In a narrow room, every extra centimetre of depth eats into the walkway, so choose a slimmer unit where space is tight. Aim to keep at least 70cm to 90cm of clear floor in front of the unit so drawers and doors open freely and people pass without turning sideways.
A sideboard should relate to the pieces around it. A large corner sofa can carry a long sideboard, while a compact two seater calls for something more modest. Look at the whole room rather than the wall alone. Browsing the wider living room furniture collection helps you judge how a unit will sit beside your seating and tables, so nothing feels out of step.
Before placing an order, confirm four numbers. The width of the wall, the width of the access route, the height that suits your sight lines, and the depth that leaves a comfortable walkway. With those in hand, you can shop with confidence. The full sideboard furniture range lists clear dimensions for every model, and free UK delivery from Furniture in Fashion means your chosen size arrives without added cost.
A few errors crop up time and again when people choose a sideboard. The most frequent is judging size by eye in a showroom or photograph, where a unit always looks smaller than it will at home. A piece that seems neat in a large display space can dominate a modest lounge. Always trust your measurements over your impression.
Another common slip is forgetting the swing of doors and the pull of drawers. A unit may fit the wall comfortably, yet leave no room to open its cupboards once a chair or table is nearby. Mark out the footprint on the floor with tape, then add the depth of an open drawer, and you will quickly see whether the space truly works. A last point worth checking is the height of skirting boards, since deep skirting can hold a sideboard a little away from the wall and affect the fit.
A unit that fills around two thirds of the wall usually looks balanced, leaving a comfortable margin at each end rather than running wall to wall.
Aim for at least 70cm to 90cm of clear floor so doors and drawers open freely and people can pass without turning sideways.
Measure doorways, hallways and any tight turns between your entrance and the room, then check those against the unit dimensions before ordering.
A height roughly level with the back of your sofa keeps sight lines calm and leaves space above for art or a mirror.
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