How to Arrange Bedroom Furniture to Maximize Space

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How to Arrange Bedroom Furniture to Maximize Space

Anita Yokota is a licensed therapist, real estate professional, and interior designer.

Emily Munroe, founder of Studio Munroe, is an interior designer with over 20 years of experience ranging from luxury high-rise interiors to traditional, suburban living.

Linda Hayslett is a Los Angeles-based interior designer with an extensive background in fashion and design.

At some point in recent history, bedrooms became multipurpose spaces: They’re playrooms for our kiddos, a go-to location for work-from-home nooks, and the ideal TV hangout spot, since everyone knows beds are cozier than couches. We expect our bedrooms to be packed with practical storage, while also (somehow) feeling restful.

Whether your space is large or small, figuring out how to arrange bedroom furniture to accommodate all of these roles can feel like a jigsaw puzzle. But with the help of home experts and smart design strategies, we’ve come up with 13 layouts for primary, guest, and children’s bedrooms that maximize space and promote comfort.

Laura Moss

1. Consult Feng Shui

Although feng shui is achieved through furniture arrangement, it’s mostly something you feel. You’ll sense the harmony right away—and in a sleeping space, this mood shift begins with your bed. Place your frame in the “command position,” with a wall or sturdy headboard behind it, room to crawl in on either side, and a view of the door, without directly facing it. Establish visual balance with symmetrical accessories: pairs of nightstands, lamps, and pillows.

David A. Land

2. Utilize Vertical Space

If your sleeping quarters are tight, look up for an easy solution. “Small living means utilizing vertical spaces,” says home therapist Anita Yokota. Her go-to moves: installing attractive, catch-all wall hooks and hanging plants and lights from the ceiling to free up the tops of dressers and nightstands. Pick furniture that does double-duty, like a headboard with shelves, a bed with drawers underneath, or bookshelves in lieu of nightstands. If your bedroom is also an office, “swap in a petite desk on one side of the bed,” suggests designer Emilie Munroe. “It’s chic and functional.”

Jonny Valiant

3. Create Zones

For large bedroom furniture arrangements, think in zones. “Figure out the bed first, then how you want to experience the rest of the spaces,” advises designer Linda Hayslett. Don’t limit yourself to a reading nook or seating area. Why not create a home office, a yoga spot, or a crafts corner? “It comes down to your goals and lifestyle. Design for that,” Yokota says. Each zone should be an island with its own accessories like rugs and lights. “Otherwise they’ll feel like an afterthought,” Munroe cautions. A consistent color palette will unite the spaces.

Brie Williams

4. Use the Window Wall

How you arrange bedroom furniture is often dictated by the room’s layout. If the best spot for your bed is on a wall with windows, as in the bedroom of designer Beth Barden (shown above), create “architecture” behind it: Think columns of curtains and a substantial headboard that makes the bed, not the window, the focal point. The right one will act as a beautiful barrier to the outside world, yet let in natural light.

Edmund Barr

5. Asymmetrical Furniture Placement

There’s no rule stating your bed must be centered on the wall. A bedroom arrangement with furniture concentrated on one side of the space can open up the traffic flow and leave more room for personalization. Here, the asymmetrical layout lends an expansive feel to a small bedroom, creating visual room for bold touches, like the patterned headboard, tasseled curtains, and layered area rugs. Symmetrical details, such as the pair of yellow lamps and nightstands, keep this arrangement from looking imbalanced.

Brie Williams

6. Repurposed Furniture

Give your bedroom collected character by mingling existing pieces with beloved antiques and formal furnishings. In this richly appointed bedroom, a gilded frame shimmers above a plush velvet headboard, and a parlor chair invites kicking back. A vintage dining table stands in as a nightstand, while an antique trunk doubles as a footboard bench. The takeaway? Pull antique furniture or accessories from more public living areas, and slot them into spots usually reserved for traditional bedroom furniture. So long as they fulfill a purpose and please your eye, the arrangement will work.

Werner Straube 

7. Space for Extra Seating

Create a restful retreat with a bedroom furniture arrangement that includes comfy chairs and benches. Your options are abundant: Tuck a chair and floor lamp into a corner to carve out a spot for reading, or move a cushioned bench to the end of a bed as a place to put on and take off your shoes. Arrange a pair of skirted chairs near a window so you can bask in the afternoon light, and cover a footboard bench in a complementary fabric for a coordinated look. Don’t add a chair for the sake of filling space, though—only incorporate seating you’ll actually use.

Richard Leo Johnson

8. Space Planning for Awkward Spaces

Windows, doorways, closets—these standard bedroom features can disrupt the flow of the space, creating an unnatural layout that makes furniture arrangement a challenge. But with a few creative tweaks, you can overcome awkward configurations, as in this bedroom with multiple windows and limited wall space. These clever homeowners stretched a small space’s footprint by centering two single beds in front of a pair of windows, with one nightstand serving both beds. The open design of these modern headboards ensures natural light can stream in, while the bamboo ladders balance the towering height of the beds.

Werner Straube

9. Don’t Forget the Lighting

Don’t overlook the lighting. Think of lamps, chandeliers, and sconces as the jewelry that lets your furniture shine. If you have the space, place a side table on either side of the bed, along with a source of light, whether wall-mounted sconces or a pair of lamps. No need to limit yourself to the expected set of nightstands: In this serene space, the homeowners flanked their upholstered bed with a small dresser and a desk that doubles as a computer station and variety table, maximizing functionality and storage. A chandelier illuminates the entire space overhead and helps center the room.

Jean Allsopp

10. Use Bunk Beds

Close quarters demand a smart bedroom furniture arrangement. In this carefree, beachy bedroom, bunk beds stack up to accommodate two sleepers in a small space. Wall-mount cage lights on one end and TVs on the other transform these beds into multipurpose lounge areas, ideal for reading, napping, or streaming. Baskets beneath the lower bunk offer easily-accessible storage, where clothes and gear can be stowed out of the way of traffic paths, which is critical in tight spaces that serve kids or guests.

Kim Cornelison


11. Head-to-Head Beds

If your space doesn’t allow for vertical bunk beds, arrange two twin beads head-to-head along a long wall. This is an excellent solution for rooms that have low or sloped ceilings (like bedrooms in an attic) and maximizes floor space for play and activities. If you don’t want to go through the trouble of building a wall, choose two bed frames that have tall, flat headboards to create the illusion of a wall, or try separating them with a freestanding bookshelf.

Michael Garland

12. Create a Window Seat

Take advantage of neglected wall space beneath windows to create a spot for relaxation (or conversation). Installing a banquette, outfitted with comfy cushions and pillows, will supply both seating and storage, while balancing what would be an empty corner with the tall headboard adjacent to it. Doors that open to the outside make this side of the room a natural spot for hanging out; a plush area rug that takes its color cue from other textiles in the room helps define the space.

Greg Scheidemann

13. Double-Duty Bedroom

With thoughtful planning, bedroom furniture arrangements can accommodate sleeping and playing. Imagine library shelves lined with well-thumbed books or armoires stocked with scrapbooking supplies. This homeowner equipped her bedroom for creative pursuits by setting up easels and art supplies near the windows and moving the bed to the opposite side of the room. A console table, art pieces, and empty frames fill the gap, linking the sleeping area and sunlit studio.

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