Getting the size of a sofa right is the difference between a room that feels generous and one that feels stuck. UK living rooms vary enormously, from compact city flats with narrow doorways to wider Victorian front rooms and open plan extensions. The shape of the space, the position of the door, the window and the radiators all influence what the room can comfortably hold. This guide from Furniture in Fashion walks through the practical steps that lead to a confident decision.
Measure the room wall to wall and note the width, length and ceiling height. Mark the position of the door and the direction it swings, the windows, the radiators and the television. Sketch a simple plan on graph paper or on a tablet. A few minutes of measuring usually saves a great deal of disappointment later.
A sofa that fits the room is no good if it cannot reach it. Walk the delivery path from the front door to the living room and measure every doorway, hallway turn and stairwell. Check the height of low ceilings on staircases and the width of any lift. If the sofa arrives in two pieces with a slip in connector, the route becomes far more flexible.
Compact UK flats and bedsits often work best with a generous two seater. Look for slim arms, raised legs and a depth of around 85 to 90 centimetres so the room still feels open. Pieces from our 2 seater fabric sofas range cover this brief well. A single occasional chair often adds more flexibility than a slightly larger sofa.
Most terraced and semi detached homes fall into this group. A three seater paired with an armchair gives strong everyday seating while leaving room to move. Browse our 3 seater fabric sofas for the most common shapes, or consider a compact corner if the wall length allows.
Generous living rooms and open plan extensions can take a longer corner shape or a matched pair. A full fabric sofa set creates a clear seating zone that reads as a designed area within a larger floor plan.
Width is only half the story. Standard sofa depth sits between 90 and 100 centimetres, which suits most adults. Deeper seats of 105 to 115 centimetres feel lounge like, but they can overwhelm a smaller room. Shallower depths of 80 to 90 centimetres preserve walking space in tighter layouts. Seat height of around 45 centimetres works well for most people; lower seats feel modern but can be harder to rise from.
A single sofa facing the focal point is the simplest layout and suits most small to mid sized rooms. An L shape with a corner sofa makes the most of larger rooms and open plan kitchens. Two sofas facing one another encourage conversation and suit homes that entertain regularly. A sofa with two armchairs offers the most flexible everyday arrangement.
Allow at least 30 to 45 centimetres between the sofa and the coffee table, and aim for walking paths of 60 to 90 centimetres around the seating. Pushing a sofa hard against every wall rarely improves the room and often makes it feel smaller.
Two seater shapes generally measure 140 to 170 centimetres wide. Three seaters fall between 190 and 220 centimetres. Four seaters sit between 220 and 250 centimetres. Compact corners reach 220 to 250 centimetres on the longest side, while larger corners run from 280 centimetres upwards.
Choosing a sofa that looked smaller in a large showroom, ignoring the depth dimension, forgetting the door swing, neglecting walking paths and skipping the delivery route check are the five most common errors. Each of them is solved by measuring twice and ordering once.
A three seater between 200 and 220 centimetres wide suits the majority of mid sized British living rooms.
Compact corner shapes can work in modest rooms, but always measure the wall length, the doorway and the walking paths before committing.
Aim for at least 30 to 45 centimetres between the sofa and the coffee table, and around 60 to 90 centimetres for main walking paths.
Both matter. Depth affects how relaxed the seat feels, while height affects how easy it is to sit down and stand up comfortably.
Yes, always measure the doorway, hallway and any stairwell along the delivery route, including the height of low ceilings on stairs.
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