The single most common mistake in British kitchens and home bars is choosing a stool that looks beautiful but sits at the wrong height. A few centimetres in either direction can change a stool from comfortable to awkward, and from sculptural to clumsy. Before colour or finish, height has to be settled.
The good news is that British counters and bars tend to follow a small number of standard measurements, which makes the maths simple once you know what to look for.
Most British kitchen worktops measure 90 to 92 cm from the floor. This is referred to in the trade as counter height. Many breakfast bars sit at the same level, especially in modern flats and new builds.
Raised breakfast bars, where the bar overhangs above the worktop on a separate surface, are usually built between 105 and 115 cm. These are referred to as bar height. Home bars and pub style fittings can sometimes rise to 120 cm, although this is less common.
Some manufacturers also offer a third measurement, often called pub or extra tall, around 117 to 122 cm, used for entertaining areas in basements and conversions.
The principle is straightforward. Subtract roughly 25 to 30 cm from the height of the surface to find the seat height of your stool. So a 90 cm worktop suits a stool with a seat at around 60 to 65 cm. A 110 cm bar suits a seat at around 80 cm.
This gap allows knees and thighs to rest naturally without pressing against the counter. It also leaves space to cross legs or shift position during a meal. Browse the wider bar stools range to compare seat heights at a glance.
Households with children, teenagers and adults rarely fit one fixed height. A six foot parent might want a slightly higher seat than a twelve year old. This is where adjustable designs become genuinely useful.
Modern hydraulic mechanisms allow a single stool to move through a range of heights, often around 60 to 80 cm. Our gas lift bar stools include neat lever based controls that operate quietly and feel similar to office chairs.
The footrest sits in direct relation to seat height. As a guide, the footrest should be about 18 to 22 cm below the seat. Lower than that and feet swing awkwardly. Higher and the knees bunch up. Good stools account for this automatically, but it is worth checking when you compare options.
Posture also depends on the back. A backless stool encourages an upright posture suited to short stays. A back rest invites longer sitting. If you tend to linger over breakfast or work at the counter, choose a stool with at least a low back support.
If you are designing a separate entertaining zone with a freestanding bar surface, the rules are the same. Most bar tables sit at 100 to 110 cm, which calls for a bar height stool around 75 to 80 cm. Bistro style tables, by contrast, sit lower, often at 75 cm, and pair with regular dining chairs rather than stools.
This is where the difference between bar tables and dining tables matters. Mixing the two without adjusting seat height usually results in either dangling feet or a counter that feels too tall.
For smaller flats and studios, traditional stools at full bar height can feel imposing. A lower counter height stool, paired with a worktop bar, often suits the proportions better. If you are styling a workspace, the stools collection includes lower designs that read as occasional seating rather than full bar furniture.
Measure the surface from the floor to the top edge. Decide whether you want a backless or backed design. Choose between fixed or adjustable mechanisms. Allow 25 to 30 cm clearance between the seat and the underside of the surface. Allow 60 cm of width per seat for spacing.
For a steady, well sorted selection of stools at counter, bar and adjustable heights, you can shop modern furniture UK at Furniture in Fashion, where free UK delivery is available across the range.
Around 90 to 92 cm. Stools with a seat height of 60 to 65 cm pair well with this measurement.
Most home bars and raised breakfast bars sit at 105 to 115 cm. These call for a stool with a seat at 75 to 80 cm.
Modern designs feel very similar in use. The mechanism adds a small amount of bulk under the seat but does not affect the comfort of the cushion itself.
Only if the surface sits at standard dining height of around 75 cm. Anything taller will leave you reaching upward in an awkward posture.
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