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mobile logo How Do You Choose a Wardrobe That Works in Narrow UK Bedrooms
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How Do You Choose a Wardrobe That Works in Narrow UK Bedrooms

How Do You Choose a Wardrobe That Works in Narrow UK Bedrooms

April 20, 2026
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fifblogadmin April 20, 2026

Furniture in Fashion Blog

Furniture in Fashion Blog

Furniture in Fashion Blog

Narrow Rooms Need Narrow Thinking

Long, thin bedrooms are common in terraced houses, rear extensions and converted spaces. The challenge is always the same. A standard wardrobe placed against one of the long walls eats into the circulation space, leaving a corridor barely wide enough to walk through. A more considered approach respects the room’s proportions and actually enhances the sense of length rather than fighting against it.

Choose the End Wall First

In a narrow bedroom, the short wall opposite the door is often the most useful spot for a wardrobe. Placing it here creates a natural focal point at the far end of the room and keeps the longer walls free for the bed and any additional furniture. This layout also prevents the room from feeling like a passage with doors on either side.

Shallow Depth Options

Standard wardrobes are around 55 to 60 centimetres deep to allow for hanging on a conventional rail. In very narrow rooms, this depth can be overwhelming. A shallower unit with sliding hangers that face forward, rather than sideways, reduces the depth to around 35 centimetres. This sort of design suits coat heavy storage and works particularly well for children and single users.

Sliding Panels Along the Long Wall

When the wardrobe must run along a long wall, sliding doors are almost always the right answer. A full run of sliding wardrobes reads cleanly and avoids the forest of open doors that hinged units create. Mirror fronts are a strong option here, because they visually widen the narrow room.

Slim Tall Pairs

Two slim single door units placed with a gap between them create a balanced arrangement on a short wall. The gap can hold a small dressing table, a chair or an open shelf. A 1 door wardrobe works well in this layout because each unit stays within a manageable footprint, yet together they offer meaningful storage.

Finish Choice and Perceived Width

Pale finishes help a narrow room feel more generous. Matt white, light oak and soft sand tones reflect daylight and soften the walls. Dark units on a long wall can make the room feel even narrower, as the eye reads the heavy surface and stops there. If darker tones are preferred, use them on the short end wall where they add depth rather than contraction.

Minimise Visual Interruptions

Narrow rooms read better when the long walls are kept visually calm. Choose a wardrobe with simple handles, flush fronts and a restrained palette. Busy panelling or contrasting trims can cut the room into visual chunks that make the space feel shorter. Elsewhere in the room, keep artwork modest and grouped rather than spread along the entire wall.

Use the Full Ceiling Height

Where floor space is limited, vertical storage becomes essential. A floor to ceiling wardrobe removes the gap at the top where dust collects and turns it into useful capacity. Top boxes are one option. Full height custom units are another, though freestanding pieces with top boxes cost significantly less and still look intentional when well chosen.

Completing the Scheme

Narrow bedrooms benefit from restraint. Pair a carefully chosen wardrobe with a low profile bed and slim bedside tables from our bedroom furniture range. For a wider view of options, explore the wardrobes at Furniture in Fashion, where every piece ships with free UK delivery.

FAQ

How narrow can a bedroom be and still fit a wardrobe?

A room of 2.2 metres wide can still hold a shallow wardrobe on a short wall without compromising walking space.

Do mirrored sliding doors really help in a narrow room?

Yes. Reflecting the length of the room makes it feel more open and brings daylight deeper into the space.

Should I avoid tall wardrobes in narrow rooms?

Not at all. Tall, slim units use vertical space well and leave more floor free, which matters most in narrow plans.

Is a shallow wardrobe enough for everyday use?

For shirts, skirts and folded items, yes. If you have many long coats, a deeper unit in a different part of the house may be better for those.

Tags:
1 door wardrobe,Bedroom Layout,narrow bedroom,sliding wardrobes
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