Oak sideboards are one of the most practical pieces of oak furniture you can add to a home, giving you closed storage, display space, and a solid focal point in the room. Yet many people hesitate to buy online because bigger items often sit in the basket for days or weeks—48% of online shoppers walk away at checkout when extra costs like shipping appear late, so clarity really matters when you shop oak sideboards. In this guide, we’ll walk through sizes, finishes, example prices, and how to match a sideboard with your oak dining table, oak bedroom furniture, or oak TV stand so you can choose with confidence.

Key Takeaways

QuestionAnswer
Where can I shop oak sideboards in one place?Browse our full oak sideboard range by size and finish on our main oak sideboard category page: Shop Oak Sideboards.
Do you offer small oak sideboards for tight spaces?Yes, our compact models are grouped here: Small Oak Sideboards, ideal for hallways and smaller living rooms.
What if I need a large oak sideboard for an open‑plan room?Our large-scale designs with multiple doors and drawers are grouped under Large Oak Sideboards.
Can I coordinate my sideboard with other living room pieces?Yes, you can pair your oak sideboard with matching coffee tables, bookcases, and an oak TV stand by browsing our wider Living Room Furniture selection.
Do you stock light oak sideboards to keep rooms bright?Our dedicated Light Oak Sideboards category focuses on brighter finishes that show off the natural grain.
Are there modern colour options that still work with oak?Yes, our Grey Sideboard range pairs contemporary grey paints with oak tops to sit comfortably alongside other oak furniture.

 

1. Why Oak Sideboards Are a Smart Storage Choice

Oak sideboards give you a lot of storage in a relatively shallow footprint, which matters in busy living and dining rooms. Because oak is hard-wearing and naturally strong, the top surface can handle serving dishes, TVs, or decorative items without feeling flimsy. Our oak sideboards sit within wider oak furniture ranges, so you can keep a consistent look from your oak dining table through to your oak TV stand and occasional pieces. When you shop oak sideboards with us, we group options by size (small to large) and by finish (light oak, rustic, or painted with oak tops) so you can quickly narrow choices to what will actually fit your room.



2. Understanding Sizes: Small vs Large Oak Sideboards

When you shop oak sideboards, size is the first filter to get right. We typically separate our oak sideboards into small, medium, and large, with widths starting from compact hallway pieces up to wide storage suited to open-plan living. Our small oak sideboards are designed for tighter spaces, often with two doors and one or more drawers but in a narrow width. On the other end, large oak sideboards include multiple doors and drawers, giving you a lot of surface area for serving dishes near an oak dining table or for storing games and media in a family room.

TypeTypical UseKey Advantage
Small Oak SideboardHallways, small living rooms, compact dining spacesStorage without taking over the room
Large Oak SideboardOpen-plan rooms, spacious dining areasMaximum storage and generous top surface
Large Oak Sideboard Listing





3. Compact Storage: Small Oak Sideboards for Hallways & Cosy Rooms

If you love oak furniture but have limited space, small oak sideboards are often the most practical choice. These pieces are compact enough for entryways and smaller living rooms but still give you useful storage for table linen, documents, or everyday clutter. One example from our range is the small oak sideboard design featuring two doors and a drawer at around 70–80 cm wide. It gives you a neat top surface for a lamp or key tray and enough internal space to keep items out of sight, which is especially helpful near the front door.



How to Measure for a Small Sideboard

To avoid returns and awkward layouts, we always recommend:

  • Measuring wall width and marking the sideboard width with masking tape.
  • Leaving at least 30–40 cm of clear walkway in front of the sideboard.
  • Checking door swing if it’s near an entrance or under a staircase.

This quick prep work makes sure your new oak sideboard feels like it belongs rather than blocking pathways.

Did You Know?
Home & furniture cart abandonment rate is about 80.32% in recent benchmarks, meaning 8 in 10 shoppers leave before completing their purchase.

4. Large Oak Sideboards for Open‑Plan Living and Dining Rooms

Large oak sideboards suit homes where you need serious storage and a strong visual anchor. In open-plan layouts, a long sideboard can visually divide a dining space from a living area while giving you plenty of room for serving dishes, board games, or office paperwork. Our large oak sideboards typically offer several cupboards and drawers, so you can separate everyday items from occasional or seasonal pieces. They pair especially well with a substantial oak dining table and matching oak dining chairs, making the dining zone look pulled together.

Fully assembled solid rustic oak sideboard

When a Large Sideboard Makes Sense

Choose a large oak sideboard if:

  • You regularly host and need storage near your dining table for serving bowls and glassware.
  • You prefer minimal shelving and want most items hidden behind doors.
  • Your room is long and a small unit would look lost against a big blank wall.

If you’re unsure whether to go small or large, consider how full your existing storage is; if cupboards are already overflowing, the larger option is usually more practical long term.

5. Light Oak Sideboards: Keeping Rooms Bright but Practical

Light oak sideboards are a good option if you need storage but don’t want a dark, heavy look. A light oak finish keeps the grain visible, suits both modern and classic spaces, and works especially well alongside light flooring or white walls. Our light oak sideboards range from small hallway units to larger dining pieces, all keeping that brighter tone. This makes them easy to pair with an oak TV stand or light oak coffee table without the room feeling closed in.

Light Oak Cabinet

Matching Light Oak with Other Furniture

Light oak is quite forgiving when you mix it with other pieces:

  • Pairs well with soft greys, white, and natural fabrics in the living room.
  • Sits nicely beside an oak dining table in a similar or slightly darker tone for subtle contrast.
  • Works with oak bedroom furniture, especially if you prefer an airy, Scandi-inspired look.

If you already own some oak pieces, compare tone in natural daylight before deciding, as artificial lighting can make wood appear warmer or cooler than it really is.

6. Oak Sideboard 110×33.5×70 cm: A Useful Mid‑Size Example

To make sizing more concrete, let’s look at one specific product: the Oak Sideboard 110×33.5×70 cm, currently listed at around £260.00. At 110 cm wide, 33.5 cm deep, and 70 cm high, this sideboard sits in the “mid-size” range—larger than a mini hallway cabinet but not as wide as our largest dining room sideboards. This particular oak sideboard offers three drawers and two cabinets, giving you a good balance between small-item organisation and bigger storage. The rustic-modern finish means it works both as an everyday living-room sideboard or as additional storage in a kitchen-diner near an oak dining table.

Oak Sideboard 110x33.5x70 – large image

Who This Size Works For

A mid-size oak sideboard like this suits you if:

  • You have a standard UK living room or dining room and want proper storage without dominating the wall.
  • You need drawers for cutlery, napkins, or office bits and bobs, plus cupboards for larger items.
  • You might later move it to another room, and want a size that adapts easily.

We find many customers start with a similar footprint and then, over time, add matching pieces like an oak TV stand or bookcase in the same collection.

Did You Know?
60% of consumers say they are willing to pay more for furniture made with sustainable materials, including responsibly sourced wood.

7. Oak Sideboard Cabinet: Classic Farmhouse‑Style Storage

Another key piece in our range is the Oak Sideboard Cabinet, which leans into a classic, farmhouse-inspired style. Built from durable solid oak, it’s designed as a long-term piece that can handle frequent use in busy homes. The layout focuses on generous concealed storage behind doors, with the option for drawers in certain configurations. This makes it suitable for both living rooms and dining rooms—use it to store crockery and glassware near your oak dining table, or to keep toys, books, and board games within easy reach but out of sight.

Oak Sideboard Cabinet – image 1

Styling a Farmhouse Oak Sideboard

To keep the look consistent and practical:

  • Place it along the same wall as your oak dining table if possible, so serving is simple.
  • Add a mirror or artwork above to make the sideboard feel like a complete feature.
  • Use baskets or organisers inside the cupboards for table linen, candles, and seasonal decor.

Over time, many customers add matching oak bedroom furniture in a similar finish to create a consistent feel throughout the home.

8. Coordinating Oak Sideboards with Oak TV Stands and Living Room Furniture

When you shop oak sideboards, it helps to think beyond a single piece and consider the whole living room. A sideboard often sits on one wall, while an oak TV stand anchors another; together, they define the room and need to work in harmony. From our wider oak furniture collections, you can pair a sideboard with an oak TV stand, lamp tables, and bookcases that share similar tones and hardware. In some of our ranges, you’ll also find matching coffee tables and console tables, so everything from your entertainment area to your hallway reflects one coherent style.

small grey tv unit

Tips for a Cohesive Living Room Layout

  • Match wood tone: keep oak sideboards and TV units in the same or very similar finish.
  • Balance heights: if your TV stand is low, a medium-height sideboard can balance the opposite wall.
  • Repeat finishes: use the same handle colour (e.g., brushed metal) on sideboard and TV unit where possible.

This approach keeps the room tidy visually without needing every piece to be identical.

9. Grey & Mixed‑Finish Sideboards That Still Work with Oak

Not every home needs an all-oak look. Our grey sideboards use painted bases with oak tops or oak details, giving you the storage benefits of a sideboard while introducing a modern colour. These are designed to sit comfortably alongside oak furniture, including an oak dining table or oak bedroom furniture, without clashing. Grey sideboards are especially useful if your walls are light and you want a soft contrast but don’t want the room dominated by wood tones. Handles and tops usually pick up the oak elements so that the piece still coordinates with an oak TV stand or coffee table.



Who Chooses Grey Sideboards?

We tend to see grey sideboards chosen by:

  • Customers with existing grey sofas, rugs, or curtains who still want real wood in the room.
  • People updating a space gradually from darker wood to lighter, more neutral tones.
  • Anyone who wants a sideboard that feels modern but still solid and long-lasting.

Because the oak top or detailing ties into other oak furniture, you can mix grey sideboards into a mostly-oak scheme without it looking disjointed.

10. Styling Ideas: Pairing Sideboards with Oak Dining Tables & Bedroom Furniture

Oak sideboards are most often used in living and dining rooms, but they can also support storage in other parts of the home. For example, a sideboard placed near an oak dining table can hold table mats, serveware, and glassware, making setting the table much faster. In bedrooms, a compact oak sideboard can pair with oak bedroom furniture for extra folded-clothes storage, or to store spare bedding and towels. Because sideboards are usually shallower than wardrobes, they work well on shorter walls or under windows where a tall unit would feel overpowering.

solid wood round dining table

Simple Styling Tips

  • In dining rooms, align the sideboard parallel to the oak dining table for a tidy, structured feel.
  • In bedrooms, use a sideboard as a low-level storage piece under a window to keep the room feeling open.
  • Repeat oak tones in smaller items (bedside tables, picture frames) so the sideboard doesn’t feel like a one-off.

When you plan the room as a whole rather than as separate purchases, you get much more use out of every storage piece.

11. White Gloss Sideboards and Mixed Spaces

While most of our focus is solid oak sideboards or oak-topped designs, some homes benefit from a lighter, more reflective piece. Our Sideboard White Gloss with LED lights is an example of this, at around £100.00, and can double as a TV unit or storage sideboard in more modern settings. Although this unit isn’t oak, customers sometimes place it alongside oak furniture when they want the TV area to blend into a white wall while keeping oak for dining or bedroom spaces. The LED lighting adds ambient light, which can be useful if your oak TV stand doesn’t include built-in lighting but you want a similar low-glow effect in the room.

When to Mix White Gloss with Oak

Consider mixing a white gloss sideboard with oak furniture when:

  • You have a mostly white or high-gloss media wall and want the storage to disappear visually.
  • You prefer oak in the dining and bedroom zones but a more contemporary finish in the living room.
  • You’re working with limited natural light and want reflective surfaces to keep the room bright.

The key is consistency—use white and oak in a deliberate pattern rather than scattering finishes randomly through the home.

Conclusion

When you shop oak sideboards, focus first on the width and depth that suit your space, then choose a finish—light oak, rustic, or grey/oak mix—that fits the rest of your oak furniture. From compact small oak sideboards for hallways to large oak sideboards that sit beside an oak dining table, each size plays a different role in how you store and use everyday items. We design our oak furniture ranges so that sideboards, oak TV stands, oak bedroom furniture, and dining tables can all sit together without clashing. By measuring carefully, planning how you’ll use the storage, and choosing finishes that work with your existing pieces, you can pick an oak sideboard that serves your home well for many years.

 

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