Buying a sofa is one of the most significant home purchases you’ll make. It needs to fit the space, suit your lifestyle, hold up over years of daily use — and look right. Here’s how to make the decision confidently.
1. Size: measure before you fall in love
The most common sofa mistake is buying based on looks before checking dimensions. In your space, measure the wall length, the clearance in front of the sofa (you need at least 90cm for comfortable walkthrough), and the route from your front door to the room — sofas frequently can’t make the corner into the living room.
Rule of thumb: your sofa should take up no more than two-thirds of the wall it sits against. In a room under 3.5m wide, a 3-seater at 200–220cm is the practical limit. In larger rooms, sectionals and L-shapes work well.
2. Seat depth: the comfort factor nobody talks about
Seat depth is the distance from the front edge of the seat to the backrest. Standard is 55–60cm. Deeper sofas (65cm+) feel more lounge-like but force shorter people to sit forward. If you’re under 5’6”, a shallower seat keeps your feet on the floor and your back supported. Taller buyers generally prefer deeper seats.
Seat height matters too. Standard is 42–45cm from the floor. Low sofas (35–40cm) look modern but are harder to get out of — relevant if you have mobility concerns or older visitors.
3. Frame: what’s holding it all together
A sofa’s longevity starts with the frame. Kiln-dried hardwood (beech, oak, ash) is the best. It’s less likely to warp, crack or creak over time. Softwood and engineered wood are common in budget sofas and can last well if the construction is solid, but check that joints are dowelled, glued and corner-blocked — not stapled.
The suspension system matters too. Eight-way hand-tied coil springs are the gold standard, found in high-end pieces. Sinuous (S-shaped) springs are the most common in mid-range sofas and work well when well-tensioned. Webbing alone is fine in foam-heavy designs but check that it’s interwoven rather than just parallel strips.
4. Fill: foam, feather or a mix?
High-resilience foam holds its shape, is easy to maintain, and works well for households with children. It’s the most common fill in quality mid-range sofas. Pure feather or feather-and-down is the softest feel but requires daily plumping — without it, cushions slump and lose shape fast. A foam core wrapped in fibre or feather gives the soft look without the maintenance.
5. Fabric: matching your lifestyle
Velvet is striking but marks easily and can crush over time. Choose it for lower-traffic rooms or if you’re committed to maintenance. Linen looks elegant and is surprisingly durable, but stains can set if not treated quickly. Performance fabrics (often labelled as stain-resistant, bouclé blends or microfibre) are the practical choice for families with children or pets. Leather is the most durable surface-material long-term but cold in winter without throws.
6. Style: reading the room
A sofa should complement your room, not fight it. In a room with hard lines and minimal decoration, a low platform sofa with clean arms reads well. In a traditional room with cornicing and picture rails, rolled arms and turned legs suit the architecture. In a casual space, an oversized L-shape invites the room to relax around it.
Consider the leg finish: brass legs push traditional, tapered wooden legs read mid-century, chrome reads contemporary. The legs lift or ground the sofa visually — and affect how easy it is to clean underneath.
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Browse 2-seaters, 3-seaters, corner sofas and sectionals — all filterable by size, material and style.
Browse sofas →Quick reference: sofa buying checklist
- Measure the wall space and the entry route from door to room
- Check seat depth against your height — sit in it, or look for the spec
- Ask about the frame material: hardwood is worth paying for
- Consider how you live: foam for families, feather for appearance-focused rooms
- Match the fabric to your lifestyle, not just the look
- Check the legs — they affect the sofa’s style more than people expect
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