Small kitchens carry the heart of many UK homes. Worktops are often short, storage is at a premium and floor space rarely allows for entirely new furniture. Yet the idea of a cocktail bar can still belong in a compact kitchen, provided it is planned with restraint and a clear sense of what really matters.
This guide walks through how to build a quiet, working cocktail area in a small kitchen, without sacrificing the everyday flow of the room.
The first decision is where the bar lives. In a small kitchen the bar should not float in the middle of the room, fighting with cooking flow. Look instead for a stretch of wall or a corner that is already underused. The end of a run of cabinets, a stretch beside a tall fridge, or a slim wall by a doorway often works.
A bar zone does not need to be large. Around 60 centimetres of width is enough for a tray, a few bottles and a chopping board. The key is to give it a clear identity, so it feels like a deliberate area rather than spillover worktop.
If there is no spare counter, a slim console table or a narrow bar table can act as your working surface. Look for depths under 40 centimetres so the piece does not crowd the floor. Wooden tops suit warmer kitchens, while glass keeps the look airy in compact rooms.
Browse our console tables collection for slim shapes, or take a look at the more upright pieces in our bar tables range if you have headroom but limited floor depth.
A working cocktail area in a small kitchen survives on careful editing. A shaker, a strainer, a jigger and a bar spoon will see you through almost every classic recipe. Beyond that, a citrus juicer and a small chopping board cover the rest. Resist the temptation to add specialist gadgets, since each one will steal counter inches you do not have.
Keep the tools either in a single drawer nearby, or on a tray on the bar surface itself. A tray is helpful in compact spaces because it gathers small items together and makes it easy to lift everything aside when more counter is needed for cooking.
Floor space is precious, so push your bar storage upwards. A floating shelf above the bar zone can hold glassware in clear sight. Two or three styles are plenty. Coupes for short drinks, highballs for long drinks, and a small set of wine glasses if there is room.
This vertical storage frees the working surface for the actual making of drinks, which is what counts.
Lighting transforms a kitchen bar from a workspace into a moment. The main kitchen ceiling light is usually too bright for evenings. A small wall light above the bar zone makes a real difference, lifting the bottles and the glassware as the kitchen ceiling lights are dimmed or switched off.
Explore our wall lights collection for slim shapes that do not jut out into the room. A pendant on a long cable can also work above a bar table, provided it sits clear of head height.
If there is genuine floor space to spare, a single stool turns the bar zone into a small social area. Someone can perch while drinks are being made, which keeps the cook company without crowding the work triangle of the kitchen.
Look at slim, backless stools rather than fully upholstered shapes. Our bar stools collection includes designs that tuck completely under a counter when not in use, which keeps the kitchen floor clear when more cooking room is needed.
Bottles are the most visual part of a cocktail bar, and the part most likely to make a small kitchen feel cluttered. Three rules help keep it calm.
First, limit display bottles to four or five. The rest live in a cabinet or pantry. Second, refill bottles with cleaner labels into plain glass decanters where possible. Third, keep the bottles grouped on the tray rather than scattered along the counter. Grouping creates the look of a curated bar rather than a stockpile.
A cocktail area should never compromise the daily use of the kitchen. Walkways must stay clear. The cooker, fridge and sink should remain easy to reach. The bar zone is best placed where it does not cross the cook flow, which protects both the food and the drinks.
If guests are likely to gather, plan the bar in a corner that pulls them away from the cooker, not toward it. This is more about layout courtesy than design, but it has a real impact on how the kitchen feels during evenings.
Finally, give the bar one small personal feature. A framed cocktail menu, a small print, a tiny vase with greenery. These touches turn what could be a purely practical area into a corner with character, which is what separates a memorable home cocktail spot from a temporary station.
For wider inspiration on how small kitchens and bars can sit happily together, browse the home ranges at Furniture in Fashion. Seeing pieces in full room contexts often unlocks the right idea for a tight kitchen, and many of our modern ranges are available with free UK delivery.
Around 60 to 80 centimetres of dedicated width is enough. The bar can share the counter with everyday use as long as the bar essentials are grouped on a tray.
A shaker, strainer, jigger and bar spoon will cover most classic cocktails. A small chopping board and a citrus juicer complete the set.
Yes, and in a small kitchen this often looks calmer. Keep four or five favourites on show and the rest tucked away.
Not necessarily. A small bar can work without seating, especially if the rest of the kitchen has a dining table nearby for guests.
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