Many UK living rooms have to do a great deal in not very many square metres. Making one feel more spacious rarely requires knocking down walls. It usually comes down to thoughtful choices around scale, colour, light and the pieces of furniture that earn their place. A room can feel airy and open even when it is genuinely small, provided the layout works with the space rather than against it.
Spaciousness often begins with subtraction. Two oversized armchairs, a heavy coffee table and a tall storage unit on the same wall will compress any room. Take a fresh look at every piece and ask whether it earns its space. Removing one chair, one side table or a redundant cabinet can transform the feel of the room without spending anything at all.
Furniture that sits on visible legs, rather than directly on the floor, lets light and floor pass underneath. The eye reads this as more open space. Slim profile sofas, side tables on slender bases and a TV cabinet raised slightly off the floor all add up to a lighter feel. Browse our fabric sofas for shapes that suit smaller rooms.
A well placed mirror is one of the simplest ways to expand a room visually. Hanging a large wall mirror opposite a window doubles the daylight, while a mirrored side table or sideboard reflects movement and brightens darker corners. Avoid placing mirrors where they only reflect clutter or a busy wall, and instead direct them towards light sources or a calm view.
Light, soft colours genuinely make a room feel larger. Off whites, warm greys, gentle stones and muted greens all reflect light and recede visually. This does not mean the room must look bare. Layer different tones of the same colour family across the walls, sofa, rug and curtains to add depth without heaviness. A single deeper accent on a chair or cushions can stop the scheme from feeling flat.
Visual clutter shrinks a room far more than any single piece of furniture. Closed storage in the form of a sideboard, a low cabinet or a shelving unit with baskets keeps daily items out of sight. The result is calmer and instantly feels more spacious. Reserve open shelves for a small number of considered objects rather than everything you own.
Pushing every piece against the wall is a habit, not a rule. Pulling a sofa even ten centimetres forward, with a slim console behind it, creates a sense of depth that flat against the wall layouts cannot match. The same applies to chairs and side tables. A small gap reads as breathing space.
Heavy curtains, dark blinds and ornaments crowding the windowsill all eat into the natural light a room receives. Simple curtains hung wider and higher than the window itself make windows look larger, while keeping sills clear lets daylight reach further into the room. Add layered lighting in the evening to keep the space feeling open after dark, including a floor lamp, a table lamp and softer ambient lighting.
It might sound counterintuitive, but a single larger sofa often makes a small room feel bigger than two smaller pieces. The room reads as one calm zone rather than several competing ones. We have plenty of options across our living room furniture range to suit this approach.
The more floor that is on show, the more spacious the room feels. A rug should be large enough to anchor the seating area but should still leave a generous border of flooring around it. Resist the urge to fill every gap with a small ottoman or stool.
Not always. Dark pieces with slim legs and clean lines can still feel light. The shape and weight of a piece matter as much as its colour.
Large enough that the front legs of the sofa rest on it. A rug that is too small can make the room feel choppy.
Not at all, provided the proportions are right. A compact corner shape can actually save space compared with a sofa and two chairs.
Patterns are fine in moderation. Use them on cushions or a single piece rather than across walls, sofa and curtains all at once.
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