Setting up a home office in a rented property has its own set of rules. Holes in walls, painted shelves and fixed lighting often sit outside the terms of a tenancy agreement. The aim is to create a workspace that feels rooted, while leaving the flat or house exactly as you found it.
This is easier than it sounds. The right freestanding furniture, a few removable additions and a clear sense of how you use the room can produce a working environment that feels considered rather than improvised. The trick is to plan around what you can take with you, rather than what you can fix to a wall.
Tenants rarely have the option of building a fitted study. The next best thing is a clearly defined zone within a larger room. A rug under the desk and chair is enough to mark the boundary visually. It separates work from the rest of the living area and gives the eye somewhere to land.
Pick a corner that is naturally quieter and away from the main flow of foot traffic. A spot behind a sofa or beside a bookcase often works better than a central wall.
Freestanding pieces travel well and leave no trace when the tenancy ends. A solid desk, a separate filing cabinet and a freestanding bookcase outperform anything attached to the wall. Our bookcases range includes tall, narrow units that suit smaller rented rooms where floor area matters more than width.
Pair the desk with a chair you can take with you when you move. A well chosen task chair will outlast several rentals and easily justify itself across the years.
Many rented homes have a single overhead light that throws shadows in all the wrong places. Adding a floor lamp behind the desk and a smaller table lamp on the surface itself transforms the working atmosphere with no fixings required.
A daylight bulb in the desk lamp helps with screen work in the morning, while a warmer bulb in the floor lamp keeps the room calm for evening reading. Both unplug and travel with you when you leave.
Cable trays that clip onto the back of the desk avoid drilling into skirting or walls. Self adhesive clips designed for renters use a low tack glue that lifts off cleanly. Group all desk cables into one trailing socket on the floor and feed power from a single wall outlet.
Behind the desk, a slim storage cabinet can hide the router, modem and any external drives. View our home and office cabinets for compact units that fit between a desk and a side wall. Across the wider Furniture in Fashion collection there are several pieces designed for this exact role.
Modular storage gives flexibility from one property to the next. A pedestal unit, a low cabinet and a small set of shelves can be arranged differently in each home you live in. Look for pieces that are not too heavy, with finishes that suit a range of rooms.
Our shelving units and storage range covers options that suit both a clean modern flat and a more traditional terraced property.
Rented flats often have hard flooring and bare walls, which makes calls and video meetings sound harsh. Soft furnishings help. A thick rug, a curtain along one wall and a fabric noticeboard can absorb sound without any structural changes.
If the room is shared, a folding screen creates a visual and acoustic divide for the working hours, then folds away again at the weekend.
Before you settle in, photograph the room as it was when you arrived. When the tenancy ends, removing your furniture and bringing the space back to that state is straightforward. The key is to favour freestanding, removable choices over anything fitted or fixed.
A narrow writing desk behind the sofa or against a kitchen wall offers a defined workspace without crowding the bed. A folding chair tucked under the desk frees up floor space when you are not working.
Many landlords accept low tack removable wallpaper, but always check the tenancy agreement first. It can lift cleanly from most painted walls if applied to a smooth surface.
A rug, a single piece of art over the desk and a habit of closing the laptop at the end of the day all help. A folding screen offers a more obvious divide if the space is shared.
Wall mounted desks, fixed shelving and built in cable trunking all require drilling. Choose freestanding alternatives that can move with you to the next address.
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