Best sofas for small living rooms in 2026: how to choose and what to buy
A small living room does not mean you have to sacrifice comfort or style. The right sofa can anchor a compact space without overwhelming it — and the wrong one can make even a generously proportioned room feel claustrophobic. Here is what to look for, and which Furni sofas are worth considering if you are working with limited floor space.
What to prioritise in a small-space sofa
Overall footprint, not just width: Most people measure how wide a sofa is and forget about depth. A 200 cm wide sofa that is 95 cm deep takes up significantly more room than a 220 cm sofa that is only 80 cm deep. Prioritise shallow-depth sofas for small rooms — they leave more clear floor space in front.
Raised legs: Sofas on visible legs feel lighter and airier than sofas with floor-skimming plinths. The visual space beneath the sofa makes the room feel larger, even though the sofa's footprint is identical.
Modular design: A sofa that can be configured to fit your exact floor plan — rather than a standard L-shape that may be too large in one direction — is a significant advantage in tight spaces. Start small and expand only if you move somewhere larger.
Light colours: Dark sofas recede visually in a small room; light colours keep the space feeling open. Oatmeal, warm white, light grey, and soft green all work well in compact living rooms.
Merlot modular sofa — the flexible choice
Merlot 3-seater modular sofa — from EUR 1,531
Configure exactly what fits your room. Start with a 3-seater and add modules only when you have more space.
The Merlot is Furni's most flexible sofa line. Because every element — seat, armrest, corner, longchair — is sold and configured independently, you can build a configuration precisely sized to your floor plan. For a small living room, a 3-seater Merlot with a single armrest on each side is often the perfect balance of seating and space efficiency. The low-armrest version sits lower and lighter, making it particularly suited to compact rooms.
Riva 3-seater with pull-out bed — the practical choice
Riva 3-seater with pull-out bed — from EUR 999
Compact proportions with a built-in sleeping function — the ideal single-room solution.
For a studio flat or a living room that doubles as a guest room, the Riva is a standout choice. Its clean, minimal design takes up less visual weight than modular systems, and the integrated pull-out bed means you do not need to find space for a separate guest bed. The drawer mechanism keeps the sleeping surface completely hidden when not in use, so the sofa never looks like a sofa bed.
Lugano sofa — understated elegance in a compact form
The Lugano collection is a streamlined 3-seater sofa with clean lines and a low, grounded profile. Available in four neutral shades — light grey, sand, khaki, and toffee — it suits smaller rooms that need a sofa to feel like part of the room rather than a dominant feature. The slim silhouette works particularly well in open-plan spaces where the sofa is visible from multiple angles.
Practical tips for placing a sofa in a small room
Float the sofa away from the wall by 5–10 cm rather than pushing it flush against it. Counterintuitive as this sounds, a sofa with a small gap behind it reads as more intentional and makes the room feel more curated. Place a narrow console table in the gap and it becomes functional too.
Avoid extending a corner sofa into the room's main circulation path. In a small room, the ideal corner sofa configuration leaves a clear walkway of at least 75 cm on the open side. If that is not possible, a straight 3-seater is the better choice.
Use a light-coloured rug the same approximate width as the sofa to anchor the seating area visually without making the floor feel smaller.









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