Before you keep scrolling: Most small console table guides throw product photos at you with no real-world context. This one is different. Every pick includes the dimensions that matter, who it is actually best for, and the one styling move that makes it look better than it costs.

I have measured a lot of entryways. Mine, my neighbors’, a rental I lived in for two years with a hallway so narrow that I genuinely had to turn sideways to get past the coats. Finding a small console table that fits a real tight space — and does not make it feel like you parked a car in the hallway — takes more thought than most people expect.

The problem is not a shortage of options. There are thousands of console tables on the market. The problem is that “small” means different things to different retailers. A table listed as small might be 48 inches wide. Another labeled compact might be 10 inches deep. Without knowing which dimensions matter for your specific space, you end up ordering the wrong thing and spending a Saturday afternoon returning furniture.

I put together this list of 19 small console tables covering every situation I run into regularly: tight hallways, apartment entries, behind-sofa placements, renters who cannot drill anything, budget buyers, and people who want something genuinely luxurious in a small package. Each pick has real dimensions and a clear take on who it is right for.

Table of Contents

Key Takeaways

  • A small console table runs 24–40 inches wide and 10–14 inches deep — that is the range that actually fits tight spaces.
  • Depth matters more than width. A 12-inch-deep table in a 48-inch hallway leaves a comfortable 36-inch walkway.
  • Open-leg designs (hairpin, tapered wood, acrylic) make small spaces feel bigger. Solid-front tables make them feel smaller.
  • For hallways under 40 inches wide, a wall-mounted floating console is almost always the smarter move.
  • Three to five items on the surface maximum — a tray, a lamp or vase, and one decorative piece. That is the formula.
  • Behind-sofa placement: match the sofa height or go up to 2 inches shorter. Keep depth under 12 inches.

What Actually Makes a Console Table Small?

Retailers use the word “small” loosely. I have seen 52-inch tables listed under the small category. So let me give you a working definition that I use when I am shopping for tight spaces.

A genuinely small console table hits these numbers: under 40 inches wide, under 14 inches deep, and between 28–34 inches tall. Anything in that range fits comfortably in an apartment entryway, a narrow hallway, or behind a smaller sofa without taking over the room.

Width is the number people check first, but depth is the number that actually determines whether the table works in your space. A 36-inch-wide table that is 18 inches deep will block your hallway worse than a 48-inch-wide table that is only 10 inches deep. Always check the depth measurement before anything else.

Quick Sizing Guide Before You Buy

Your SpaceMax DepthIdeal WidthBest Table Type
Hallway under 40 in wide8–10 inches24–32 inchesFloating wall-mounted
Hallway 40–48 in wide10–12 inches30–40 inchesSlim freestanding or floating
Standard entryway 48–60 in wide12–14 inches36–48 inchesFreestanding, any style
Behind a sofa10–12 inchesMatch sofa length ± 6 inSame height as sofa back
Small apartment entry nook8–11 inches20–30 inchesFloating or very slim freestanding

One rule worth memorizing: you need a minimum of 36 inches of clear walkway after your table is placed. Measure your hallway, subtract the table depth, and if you end up under 36 inches, go shallower or go floating. This one calculation prevents the most common small-space furniture mistake.

The 19 Small Console Table Ideas

01- The Slim Solid Wood Console with Tapered Legs (Best Overall Small Console)

Width: 36 inches | Depth: 12 inches | Height: 32 inches | Material: Solid wood

This is the table I recommend most often because it works everywhere. At 36 inches wide and 12 inches deep, it sits comfortably in a standard apartment entryway without claiming territory it does not need. The tapered legs keep the base visual weight low, so the hallway still feels open even with the table in it.

Solid wood means it survives daily use — keys thrown on it, bags dropped next to it, kids using it as a shortcut to touch everything. The walnut and natural oak finishes photograph beautifully for Pinterest if you ever want to share a styled shot.

Styling move: Pair with a round mirror 18–22 inches wide. The round shape softens the rectangular table and makes the whole entry feel less boxed in.

Slim Solid Wood Console with Tapered Legs – Shop on Amazon

02- The Floating Wall-Mounted Console (Best for Hallways Under 40 Inches Wide)

Width: 24–30 inches | Depth: 8–10 inches | Height: Mounted at 30–34 inches | Material: Wood + metal bracket

If your hallway is under 40 inches wide, stop looking at freestanding tables. A floating console is the right answer. It mounts to the wall, keeps the floor completely clear, and makes even the tightest hallway feel deliberate rather than cramped.

The key is finding a model that uses a hidden French cleat mounting system so the bracket is invisible from the front. Most floating consoles in this category carry 50–75 lbs comfortably, which is plenty for a lamp, tray, and a few accessories. Renters should look for single-stud mounting options and fill the anchor holes with spackling compound before moving out.

Styling move: Paint the wall behind the floating console one tone darker than the surrounding wall in the same paint family. It creates a visual backdrop that makes the console look purposefully designed into the space.

03- The Hairpin Leg Console with Wood Top (Best Mid-Century Modern Small Console)

Width: 30–36 inches | Depth: 11–12 inches | Height: 29–32 inches | Material: Wood top, steel hairpin legs

Hairpin leg consoles are one of the most visually lightweight furniture options you can buy. The thin steel legs take up almost no visual space, so the table seems to float just above the floor. In a small entryway, that open-base design keeps things feeling airy rather than blocked.

The best versions pair a live-edge or butcher-block wood top with raw black steel hairpin legs. That combination works in modern homes, industrial lofts, farmhouse setups, and boho spaces. It is genuinely hard to style badly.

Styling move: Keep the accessories minimal. One small succulent in a concrete pot, a thin stack of design books, and a tray. The table is the statement — let it do the talking.

Learn More – 15 Modern Living Room Decor Ideas

04- The All-White Lacquer or Painted Console (Best White Small Console Table)

Width: 32–38 inches | Depth: 11–13 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: MDF or solid wood, white finish

A white console table in a small space works because it almost disappears against a white or light wall. It reflects whatever light exists in the entryway and keeps the space from feeling dark or heavy. That is especially useful in apartments with no natural light near the front door.

The challenge is maintenance. White surfaces show dust, fingerprints, and scuffs faster than anything else. If you go white, choose one with a lacquered or semi-gloss finish rather than matte — it wipes clean much more easily and holds up to daily hand contact without looking grey within a month.

Styling move: Introduce texture through accessories rather than color. A rough linen tray, a terracotta vase, a woven basket on the lower shelf if there is one. The texture contrast against the smooth white is what makes the setup feel warm rather than clinical.

05- The Small Console with One or Two Drawers (Best Small Console with Storage)

Width: 34–40 inches | Depth: 12–14 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: Wood or engineered wood

A drawer in a small console table is the best argument for keeping clutter off the surface. Everything that normally piles up on a bare table — charging cables, lip balm, rubber bands, takeout menus, that one receipt you might need — goes in the drawer. The top stays clean and styled.

For a small console, one deep drawer is better than two shallow ones. You get more storage flexibility and can fit taller items like a small notebook or backup phone charger without fighting with a low ceiling inside the drawer. Look for soft-close drawer glides — they make the whole piece feel more premium even if the table itself is modestly priced.

Styling move: Line the drawer with felt or a linen liner before you fill it. It keeps small items from sliding and makes the interior feel finished when guests inadvertently peek inside.

06- The Narrow Sofa Table Under 12 Inches Deep (Best for Behind a Small Sofa)

Width: 48–60 inches (match sofa) | Depth: 10–12 inches | Height: Match sofa back ± 2 in | Material: Wood or metal-and-wood

Behind-sofa console placement is one of the most underused ideas in small living rooms. Instead of pushing the sofa against the wall and losing usable floor space, you pull the sofa a foot into the room, slide a slim console behind it, and suddenly you have a surface for lamps, books, and drinks that also doubles as a subtle room divider.

The critical measurement here is height. The table should sit at the same height as the sofa back or up to two inches shorter. Higher than that and it looks like a shelf behind the sofa. Lower and it disappears visually and you lose the room-divider effect.

Styling move: Two matching lamps at either end of the behind-sofa console create symmetry and anchor the furniture grouping visually. It reads like a designed room rather than furniture just pushed around.

07- The Black Metal Frame Console with Wood Shelf (Best Industrial Style Small Console)

Width: 30–40 inches | Depth: 11–13 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: Powder-coated steel + wood shelf

A black metal frame with a wood top and lower shelf is the most versatile small console table finish combination I know. The metal frame is thin enough that it barely registers visually, so the table has almost no visual weight. The wood shelf adds warmth and gives you a second storage level without making the piece taller.

This style works in industrial lofts and modern apartments but also holds up in transitional homes when you pair it with warm accessories. Switch out the accessories and the same table looks completely different: concrete and matte black for an industrial read, rattan and linen for a softer bohemian mood.

Styling move: Always style the lower shelf — an empty lower shelf on a metal frame console looks unfinished. Two matching seagrass baskets or a stack of oversized coffee table books with a small plant does the job.

Learn More – 12 Stunning New York Apartment Design Ideas for Small Spaces

08- The Reclaimed Wood Console with Open Lower Shelf (Best Rustic Farmhouse Small Console)

Width: 36–42 inches | Depth: 12–14 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: Reclaimed or distressed wood

Reclaimed wood console tables bring a warm, imperfect quality that is nearly impossible to fake with new materials. The knots, color variations, and grain differences are exactly what makes the piece interesting. No two reclaimed wood tables look identical, which gives it an authenticity that catalog furniture rarely achieves.

For a small farmhouse entryway, pair the reclaimed wood console with a large galvanized metal tray to collect everyday items, a small potted herb or succulent, and a chunky pillar candle. The layering of natural textures — wood, metal, ceramic, plant — is what makes the farmhouse aesthetic feel full without being cluttered.

Styling move: Woven baskets on the lower shelf do double duty here: they reinforce the natural material palette and hide whatever needs hiding — shoes, dog leashes, seasonal accessories.

09- The Clear Acrylic Console That Disappears (Best Acrylic or Lucite Small Console)

Width: 30–40 inches | Depth: 10–14 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: Acrylic / lucite

Clear acrylic consoles are the secret weapon for very small spaces. They are physically present — they hold items, they have a surface, they anchor a wall — but visually they barely register. In a tiny apartment entry, a clear console lets the wall behind it show through, which keeps the space from feeling crowded.

The downside is maintenance. Acrylic scratches more easily than wood and shows fingerprints aggressively. Keep a microfiber cloth nearby and clean it weekly. Also avoid placing sharp-edged items directly on the surface — use a tray or felt pads underneath everything to protect the acrylic from scratching from below.

Styling move: Go bold with the accessories on a clear table since the table itself is invisible. A vivid ceramic vase in a deep color, a sculptural candle holder, or a bright plant make a strong statement without the table competing for attention.

10- The Engineered Stone Top Console – Marble Alternative (Best Marble-Look Small Console)

Width: 32–40 inches | Depth: 11–14 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: Engineered stone or sintered stone + metal base

Real marble is beautiful and impractical for an entryway. It etches when anything acidic touches it, needs annual sealing, and weighs a remarkable amount for a small table. Engineered stone and sintered stone tops give you the veining and the visual luxury of marble without any of those maintenance problems.

The best small marble-look consoles pair a white or grey veined stone top with a slim brass or matte black metal base. The contrast between the stone pattern and the thin metal legs is what makes the piece feel designer rather than stock.

Styling move: Keep accessories in the same material story as the table. Brass candleholders, a black ceramic vase, white marble bookends. A consistent two-tone palette (stone white + one accent metal) reads as intentional rather than collected at random.

11- The Light Oak Scandi Console with Open Base (Best Scandinavian Style Small Console)

Width: 30–40 inches | Depth: 11–13 inches | Height: 29–33 inches | Material: Light oak or beech wood

Scandinavian console tables in pale oak or beech are made for small spaces by design philosophy. The Scandinavian approach to furniture prioritizes clean lines, light finishes, and minimal ornamentation — all three of those qualities serve small spaces exceptionally well. The light wood tones bounce natural light rather than absorbing it.

The best Scandi consoles sit on slim legs with a lower open shelf rather than a solid base. That open lower section keeps the piece feeling light and gives you storage without weight. Style it with white ceramics, a small woven basket, and fresh or dried botanicals for the full Nordic hygge effect.

Styling move: A single white ceramic table lamp with a linen shade on one end of a Scandi console is one of the most quietly beautiful entryway setups you can create. It photographs well and it works every season.

12- The Low-Profile Japandi Console with Visible Grain (Best Japandi Style Small Console)

Width: 28–38 inches | Depth: 10–13 inches | Height: 28–32 inches | Material: Solid ash, oak, or walnut

Japandi consoles sit slightly lower than standard because the Japanese design influence brings the visual center of gravity down. That lower profile makes a hallway feel taller rather than shorter, which is counterintuitive but genuinely effective in small spaces.

Look for tables with visible joinery — mortise-and-tenon joints, through-tenons, or exposed dowel construction. The craftsmanship is the decoration. A Japandi console needs very little on the surface because the table itself is the statement: one bud vase with two stems, a small ceramic tray, and clear wall space above rather than a busy mirror arrangement.

Styling move: Resist the urge to fill the surface. Negative space is intentional in Japandi design. One beautiful object on a well-made table creates more impact than five objects on the same table.

13- The Two-Tier Console with Shelf for Baskets (Best Small Console with Lower Basket Storage)

Width: 34–42 inches | Depth: 12–15 inches | Height: 30–35 inches | Material: Wood or metal-and-wood

A lower shelf changes a small console table from a display surface into a genuine storage piece. For families, this is the difference between an entryway that stays reasonably organized and one that turns into a daily pile of shoes, bags, and forgotten mail.

The most practical setup: one or two woven baskets on the lower shelf for items you need to hide, and the table surface kept minimal with just a tray and one small decorative piece. The baskets do the heavy lifting — they hold keys from the kids, dog leashes, reusable shopping bags, whatever lands at the door — and they still look styled from a distance.

Styling move: Match the basket material to one other natural element on the surface. Rattan basket plus rattan tray, or seagrass basket plus linen lamp shade. The material echo pulls the whole setup together.

14- The Engineered Wood Console with Strong Bones (Best Budget Small Console Under $150)

Width: 32–40 inches | Depth: 11–13 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Price range: $79–$149

You do not need to spend $400 on a small console table to get something that looks good and holds up to daily use. The key with budget options is avoiding the ones with visible MDF edges, wobbly joints, or cheap plastic hardware. Look for engineered wood with a veneer face (not a printed laminate), solid wood legs, and metal drawer pulls if the table has drawers.

At this price point, the table itself is not going to be the focal point — and that is fine. Let your accessories carry the visual weight. A good mirror from a thrift store, a decent lamp, and a couple of well-chosen accessories on a $100 console table will look significantly better than a bare $500 table with nothing on it.

Styling move: Spray paint the legs of a budget console. A $6 can of satin black, brass, or white spray paint on bare wood or existing finish legs changes the whole character of the piece and takes about 20 minutes.

15- The Freestanding Slim Console with Anti-Tip Strap (Best Small Console for Renters (No-Drill Options) )

Width: 28–36 inches | Depth: 10–12 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Setup: Freestanding, wall anti-tip strap

Renters in apartments often skip console tables because they assume a floating option requires drilling and a freestanding option will look cheap. Neither has to be true. A slim freestanding console in the right dimensions looks just as good as a mounted one, and an anti-tip furniture strap (the kind used to secure bookshelves for child safety) attaches without permanent damage to most walls.

The furniture strap goes into the baseboard or a stud at low height — landlords generally cannot object to a small anchor that is smaller than a picture-hanging nail. When you move out, fill it with a dab of spackling compound and touch up the paint.

Styling move: Lean a large mirror against the wall behind the console rather than hanging it. A 36-inch or taller mirror leaned casually against the wall looks intentionally styled and requires zero wall holes.

16- The Bleached Wood or Rattan Console (Best Small Console for Coastal or Boho Style)

Width: 34–42 inches | Depth: 12–14 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: Bleached wood or rattan-wrapped frame

Bleached or whitewashed wood consoles and rattan-wrapped console frames are the defining piece of coastal and bohemian entryway styling. They bring natural texture and warmth without the heaviness of dark wood, and they work especially well in homes with white or light warm-toned walls.

The styling palette for this category writes itself: pampas grass or dried botanicals in a ripple-glass vase, a linen or jute tray, a terracotta pot with a trailing plant. Stay away from shiny chrome accessories or anything with a hard industrial finish — it breaks the natural material story immediately.

Styling move: A single oversized pampas grass stem in a white ceramic vase at one end of the console is the most-photographed coastal entryway moment on Pinterest. It is a cliché because it genuinely works.

17- The Entryway Console with Wall Hook Rail Above (Best Small Console with Built-In Hooks or Rails)

Width: 30–42 inches | Depth: 10–14 inches | Height: 30–34 in (table) + rail above | Material: Wood + metal hooks

Some small console tables come with a matching wall-mounted hook rail that installs directly above the table surface. The combination turns a narrow console into a fully functional entryway station: hooks for bags, coats, and umbrellas above, table surface for keys and mail, and lower shelf if the design includes one.

This setup works particularly well in apartments with no dedicated closet near the front door. The hook rail keeps bags and coats off the floor and off the chairs, which is the single biggest entryway organization win most people can make. In a small space, clear floor and clear chair equals a room that feels twice its actual size.

Styling move: Limit the hooks to three or four items maximum. An overstuffed hook rail looks cluttered from every angle. One bag, one set of keys, one dog leash, one coat. Everything else goes elsewhere.

18- The Gold or Brass Metal Mirrored Console (Best Small Glam or Art Deco Console)

Width: 32–40 inches | Depth: 10–14 inches | Height: 30–34 inches | Material: Metal frame (gold/brass), mirrored or glass top

A mirrored or glass-topped console with brass or gold metal legs is one of those pieces that looks wildly expensive even at a reasonable price point. The mirrored top reflects light and makes the entry feel larger. The gold legs add warmth and a sense of luxury that dark metal frames simply cannot deliver in the same way.

This style is not for every home. It needs at least a few soft elements nearby — a plush rug, a velvet cushion on a nearby bench, or heavy drapes — to keep from reading as a set piece from an old hotel lobby. Paired correctly, it is one of the most striking small console table options available.

Styling move: A tall white orchid or a single stem in a thin gold bud vase on a mirrored console is genuinely difficult to photograph badly. It hits every note: height, organic softness, and material consistency.

19- The Versatile Slim Accent Console (Best Small Console for a Bedroom or Living Room Wall)

Width: 24–34 inches | Depth: 10–12 inches | Height: 28–33 inches | Material: Any — wood, metal, rattan

Not every small console table lives in an entryway. A narrow accent console along a bedroom wall holds a lamp, a few books, and a small plant without taking up the floor space a nightstand and dresser would need. Against a living room feature wall, a slim console adds storage and display at a scale that does not eat the room.

The key for non-entryway placements is choosing a table that blends with the existing furniture rather than announcing itself as a separate piece. Match the leg finish to an existing metal element in the room, or match the wood tone to the nearest large furniture piece. The console should feel like it was always there.

Styling move: In a bedroom, use the console surface as a nightstand alternative for the far side of the bed where a traditional nightstand does not fit. A slim 10-inch-deep console handles a lamp and alarm clock comfortably without crowding the walkway.

How to Style a Small Console Table: The Core Formula

The Rule of Three

Odd numbers look better on console tables than even numbers. Three items, five items — never two or four. The human eye finds even-numbered groupings symmetrical and static, while odd groupings feel dynamic and considered. On a small console, three is usually the right number: one tall item, one medium item, one small item. The height variation creates visual movement across the surface.

Always Use a Tray

A tray on a console table is not just a storage tool. It defines a visual boundary. Everything inside the tray belongs together as a group. Everything outside the tray is a separate intentional element. Without a tray, loose items — keys, coins, sunglasses, chapstick — spread across the surface and make the table look like a junk repository even when it holds relatively few things.

Mirror Math

If you are hanging a mirror above your small console, target a width between 50–75% of the table’s width. Leave 6–8 inches between the table surface and the bottom of the mirror frame. For a 32-inch console, that means a mirror between 16–24 inches wide. For a 40-inch console, target 20–30 inches wide. Going bigger makes the space feel more open. Going smaller makes the mirror look like an afterthought.

Height Layering

The most common styling mistake on small console tables is putting everything at the same height. A lamp, a vase, and a candle all at 8 inches tall reads flat. Instead, choose items that stagger in height: a lamp at 18 inches, a vase at 10 inches, and a small tray or bowl at 3 inches. The descending line of heights leads the eye across the table naturally.

Common Small Console Table Mistakes

Buying Too Deep for the Space

I say this in almost every furniture guide and it is because it is almost always the most expensive mistake people make. Depth is the measurement that determines whether a console table makes your hallway feel comfortable or claustrophobic. Check the depth before you check the style. Every time.

Choosing a Solid-Front Table for a Tiny Space

A console table with a solid panel front — no legs visible, just a flat-fronted cabinet-style base — is the wrong choice for very small spaces. It has far more visual weight than an open-leg design, which makes the space feel smaller. Open legs let you see the floor beneath the table, which registers as clear, unoccupied space even though the table is physically there.

Hanging a Too-Small Mirror Above It

A 12-inch mirror above a 36-inch console looks like it was hung before the table arrived. It is one of the most visually awkward combinations in home decor. Go bigger than you think you need to. A larger mirror is almost always the right choice over a smaller one.

Overcrowding the Surface

A small console table has a small surface area. Putting eight items on it does not make it look full and curated — it makes it look cluttered. Five items maximum. Use a tray to contain the small loose items. Keep the remaining surface visibly clear. Negative space on a small table is not wasted space. It is what makes the items you did place there look intentional.

Ignoring the Floor Around It

A small console table that sits on bare floor in an entryway can feel unanchored. A small rug — even 2×3 feet — in front of or under the console grounds the piece and adds texture and warmth. It also protects the floor from chair legs, dropped items, and foot traffic near the door.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is considered a small console table?

A small console table is generally one that is under 40 inches wide and 14 inches deep. Most small consoles run between 24–36 inches wide and 10–13 inches deep. Height typically stays between 28–34 inches. If it fits comfortably in a hallway, apartment entry, or behind a small sofa without dominating the space, it qualifies as small.

What size console table works in a narrow hallway?

For a narrow hallway, choose a console table no deeper than 10–12 inches. You need at least 36 inches of clear walking space after the table is placed. In a 48-inch-wide hallway, a 12-inch-deep table leaves exactly 36 inches of clearance. In a 40-inch hallway, drop to 10 inches deep or use a wall-mounted floating console to keep the floor entirely clear.

Can a small console table work behind a sofa?

Yes — and it is one of the best small-space living room tricks available. For behind-sofa placement, choose a console table that matches the sofa’s back height or sits up to 2 inches shorter. The length should match or come within 6 inches shorter than the sofa on each end. Keep depth under 12 inches so the table does not push the sofa further into the room than intended.

What should I put on a small console table?

On a small console table, stick to three to five items maximum: one tall element like a lamp or vase, one functional item like a tray for keys or mail, and one or two small decorative pieces. A mirror above the table completes the look without adding surface clutter. Always use a tray to contain loose everyday items — it is what separates a styled console from a cluttered one.

How deep should a small console table be for an entryway?

For most entryways, 10–14 inches deep is the right range. At 10–12 inches, the table fits even tight hallways without blocking traffic. At 13–14 inches, you get a slightly larger styling surface while still keeping the walkway comfortable. Avoid anything deeper than 16 inches in a small entryway — at that depth, the table starts to feel like a wall rather than an accent piece.

Is a floating console table better for small spaces?

For very narrow hallways under 40 inches wide, a floating wall-mounted console table is often the smarter choice. It keeps the floor completely clear, which makes the space feel visually larger. It also makes sweeping and mopping much easier. For hallways 40 inches or wider, a slim freestanding console works just as well and gives you more flexibility if you rearrange later.

What style of small console table makes a room look bigger?

Open-frame console tables with thin legs — metal hairpin legs, tapered wood legs, or lucite acrylic legs — make a room feel bigger because you can see the floor beneath them. Glass and acrylic tops also disappear visually and contribute to an open feeling. Avoid bulky solid-front consoles in tight spaces. They have too much visual weight for small hallways and make the room feel smaller, not larger.

Wrapping It Up

A small console table is one of the highest-return furniture investments you can make. The right one turns a bare wall into an intentional moment, gives a hallway a reason to exist as a room, and genuinely makes your day better because you always know where your keys are.

The picks in this list cover the full range — from budget finds under $150 to investment pieces in marble and solid hardwood, from renter-friendly floating consoles to the behind-sofa trick that most people have not tried yet. Start with your dimensions. Pick the category that fits your space and your style. The rest is just fun.

If you want to go deeper on styling the table once you have it, my guide on entryway console table ideas covers 17 specific setups with styling photos and Amazon affiliate links for each. And if your console table will live in your living room, check out my small living room decor ideas for the full picture.

Written by

Fahad Taj

Hi, I’m Fahad Taj — the person behind this luxury home decor brand. I believe your home should feel as beautiful as it looks, which is why I carefully select pieces that bring elegance, comfort, and a touch of luxury into your space. My goal is simple: to help you create a home that reflects your style and feels truly special.