Categories: Children's Furniture

How to Plan a Children’s Bedroom Makeover From Start to Finish in the UK

Refreshing a child’s bedroom often feels like a small job until the planning begins. The space has to hold sleeping, playing, dressing and sometimes studying, frequently within only a few square metres. A clear order of work keeps the project calm, the spending sensible and the result something your child will actually enjoy living in.

Begin by watching how the room is really used

A bedroom for a toddler works very differently to one shared by two siblings or used by an older child who needs a quiet corner for homework. Before you choose a single colour or piece of furniture, spend a few days noticing how your child moves through the space. Where do toys gather? Where do clothes land? Is the bed pushed into a draughty corner or under a window? These small observations tell you far more than any mood board, and they stop you buying things that look lovely but solve the wrong problem.

Set a budget and a sensible order of work

Decide early what you can spend, then split the money across decorating, furniture and finishing touches. As a rule the structural work comes first. Sort out any damp, repaint the ceiling and walls, then lay or refresh the flooring. Only once the shell is done should the larger pieces arrive. Bringing in a wardrobe before the walls are painted simply creates obstacles and risks knocks and scuffs on brand new finishes.

Choose furniture that grows with your child

Children change quickly, so the most useful pieces are the ones that adapt. A sturdy single bed with a clean frame will last far longer than a themed design tied to one passing interest. When you browse children’s beds, look for solid construction and timeless shapes rather than novelty. The same thinking applies to wardrobes. A well made unit from a range of children’s wardrobes will carry clothes from primary school through to the teenage years if you choose a neutral finish that suits a maturing taste.

If the room is shared, plan zones rather than a strict split down the middle. Two beds at right angles, a shared desk and clearly owned storage for each child reduce squabbles and make the floor feel larger.

Make storage something children can actually reach

The quickest way to a tidy room is storage placed at a child’s height. High shelves look neat in photographs but go unused because little hands cannot reach them. Low open baskets, labelled drawers and a generous box for soft toys keep the daily clear up realistic. A practical range of children’s storage furniture gives you cubbies and units sized for younger users, while a dedicated children’s toy box turns the nightly tidy into a single, manageable task rather than a battle.

Layer colour, light and the finishing touches

Colour is where a room gains its personality, so let your child have a say while you keep the larger surfaces calm. Soft walls in a warm neutral or gentle shade give you a flexible backdrop, and the brighter character can come through bedding, a rug and wall art that is easy to swap later. Lighting matters more than people expect in a child’s room. A bright central light for play, a softer bedside lamp for stories and a blackout blind for summer mornings cover every part of the day. Finish with a few personal pieces, framed drawings or a shelf of favourite books, so the space feels owned rather than styled.

For wider inspiration across every room in the home you can shop modern furniture in the UK at Furniture in Fashion, where the broader children’s furniture collection sits alongside everything else you might need for a full home refresh, all with free UK delivery.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a children’s bedroom makeover take?

A straightforward refresh with painting and new furniture usually takes a couple of weekends. Allow more time if you are dealing with damp, new flooring or a full layout change, and always let paint dry fully before moving furniture back in.

Should I involve my child in the design choices?

Yes, within sensible limits. Letting children choose bedding, a rug or wall art gives them ownership of the room while you keep control of the larger, longer lasting decisions such as the bed frame and wall colour.

What is the best flooring for a child’s room?

A warm, easy to clean floor works well. Many UK families choose a soft carpet for comfort underfoot or a hard floor softened with a washable rug, which copes better with spills and play.

How do I keep the room tidy day to day?

Place storage at your child’s height and keep it simple. Low baskets, labelled drawers and a single toy box make tidying achievable for younger children without constant help.

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