The relationship between a sofa and the table beside it is more important than people often realise. A poorly matched side table will be ignored, knocked into, or left bare. A well chosen one becomes part of how you use the room. In British homes, where sofas often face windows or sit against an awkward wall, the side table has to work with the geometry rather than against it.
Below we look at what makes a side table genuinely useful next to a sofa, and which modern designs handle the role most gracefully.
The single most important measurement is height. The top of the side table should sit close to the top of the sofa arm. Too low and you find yourself reaching down for your tea. Too high and the table starts to compete with the sofa visually.
Most modern British sofas have arm heights between 55 and 65 centimetres. A side table in that range, perhaps a centimetre or two below the arm, feels natural in everyday use. Sofas with very low arms, or armless designs, suit slightly shorter tables, around 50 centimetres.
The shape of the sofa shapes the table choice. A sleek modern sofa with slim arms and tapered legs sits well alongside a slender metal or glass side table. A deep velvet sofa with rolled arms benefits from something with a bit more visual weight, perhaps a marble top on a turned base. A linen sofa with a relaxed feel pairs comfortably with solid wood.
Our marble side tables work especially well next to deeper, more substantial sofas because the stone has the presence to hold its own without overwhelming the seating.
Width is the next consideration. A side table that is too wide blocks the route past the sofa. Too narrow and it cannot hold what you need. For most UK living rooms, a top between 35 and 50 centimetres across covers the practical bases of lamp, drink, book and remote.
Round tables can be slightly more generous since their footprint is softer. Square tables that align with the sofa edge tend to look neater when the room has clean lines.
One of the quieter jobs of a sofa side table is to hold a lamp. A table lamp at sofa height creates a softer pool of light than overhead lighting and changes the mood of the room in the evening. The table needs to be stable enough to hold the lamp safely, with a top large enough to leave room for a mug or a glass next to the base.
Heavier wooden or marble tops handle taller lamps comfortably. Glass tops can feel less stable with very large lamps, so it is worth choosing a substantial base if you want a tall lamp on a glass surface.
Magazines, books, remotes and chargers tend to gather around the sofa. A side table with a small shelf or a single drawer keeps the chaos at bay without needing a full storage piece. Open shelves work well for books you actually read. Drawers suit smaller items you would rather keep out of sight.
Some of our most useful designs in this category sit within the wooden side tables collection, where solid construction supports the weight of stacked books or a heavier lamp.
Symmetrical living rooms with a sofa flanked by two matching tables suit formal interiors and larger spaces. In smaller or more relaxed British homes, a single side table on the most used end of the sofa often feels more honest. The other end can stay clear, or hold a floor lamp, or be left for a small stool.
Asymmetry has become more common in modern interiors, partly because UK rooms rarely allow perfect symmetry anyway. Working with the room rather than against it tends to look better.
Side tables next to sofas take more wear than people expect. Cups get set down, drinks occasionally spill, books slide off. The materials that handle this best are sealed wood, treated stone, powder coated metal and toughened glass. Untreated timber and delicate veneers can mark quickly when life happens around them.
Our metal side tables are particularly hard wearing and suit households where the sofa sees daily, family scale use.
The side tables that work best next to sofas in UK homes share three traits. They sit at the right height, they suit the sofa they are paired with, and they earn their place every day rather than serving only a decorative purpose. The wider side tables range at Furniture in Fashion covers all of these considerations across modern, classic and minimalist styles, with free UK delivery throughout.
Leaving a small gap of two to three centimetres looks neater and protects both pieces from rubbing. Pushing the table flush against the sofa is acceptable but can mark the upholstery over time.
Slightly taller is fine, especially for armless or low arm sofas. More than five centimetres above the arm starts to look mismatched in most rooms.
Felt pads on the feet help on hard floors. Small rubber pads underneath stop the table from drifting on rugs.
Often yes. Most households use only one end of the sofa actively. A second table on the other end is a stylistic choice rather than a necessity.
Bedroom storage in 2026 is expected to look as good as it works, and this…
Maximalism is layered, personal and full of character, and the bed sits at the heart…
A dedicated boot room is not something every UK home can offer, but the tidy…
A compact courtyard, patio or balcony can feel just as considered as a large garden…
Homes that seat five or more people every evening need sofas built for constant use,…
Furnishing a bedroom means balancing two competing wishes, the desire for a room that feels…
This website uses cookies.