Kids

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Kids' rooms turn over fast. The trick is buying things that survive the phase. We list thousands here from Robert Dyas, The Range, Very alongside other UK retailers. read more…

over 3,600 Kids from 28 UK Retailers in June ’26

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Kids' rooms: what to look for

Kids' bedrooms have to flex through three or four different lifestages: toddler, primary-school, pre-teen, teenager. Each lifestage has different storage demands, different play requirements, and different preferences from the child living there. The trick to spending sensibly is buying for the next two stages rather than the current one.

Beds are the headline spend. Cot bed (transitions to a toddler bed at 18 months and a small single by age four) is the staged option for under-fives. A single bed (90 by 190cm) covers ages four to mid-teens. Bunk beds work for shared bedrooms and sleepover-heavy households. Mid-sleeper beds (raised single with desk or storage underneath) suit ages six-plus and reclaim floor space.

Storage grows with the child. Toy storage in toddler years (low, accessible, washable). Wardrobe and chest-of-drawers in primary years. Desk and shelving from age six onwards. Buy a wardrobe that's adult-sized rather than kid-sized: it will outlast the room.

Mattress safety for kids' beds. Anti-allergy treatment is worth the small premium for ages 0-7 when respiratory systems are still developing. Washable covers help with the inevitable accidents. Check the maximum mattress depth on bunk-bed top bunks (most bunk frames specify 15cm or 18cm cap so the safety rail height stays correct).

Decor: kids' tastes change every two years. Buy the bigger pieces (bed, wardrobe, chest of drawers) in neutral colours that survive the change; spend the personality budget on bedding, cushions, wall stickers and bedside lamps that can be swapped cheaply.

The brands and retailers we list

We pull around 7,800 kids' room products across the UK retailer network.

The Range stocks the broadest selection across kids' beds, bedding, storage and decor.

Robert Dyas covers branded children's bedding (Disney, Marvel licensed) and kids' furniture in the £100 to £400 bracket.

Very stocks the high-street tier including bunk beds, mid-sleepers and matched bedroom sets.

Filter the grid above by category, age range or price to narrow things down. Prices update daily.

Frequently asked questions

When can a child move from a cot to a single bed?
NHS guidance points to 18 months to 3 years, depending on whether the child climbs out of the cot or stays settled in it. Cot beds bridge the gap by converting. Toddler beds sit lower to the floor for the first year or two of independent sleeping.
What size desk does a primary-school child need?
80cm wide by 50cm deep handles a laptop or A4 paper plus a few books, which covers Years 1 to 6. Adjustable-height desks (55 to 75cm) follow the child from 6 to 13 without replacement. Fixed-height desks at 73cm suit adult use, not children under 10.
Are bunk beds safe, and from what age?
UK safety standard BS EN 747 says no child under 6 on the top bunk. Side rails on all four corners, gap less than 7.5cm between rails to stop limbs trapping, ladder secured to the frame. Single bunks lasting two children typically clock 8 to 12 years of use before metal frames creak.
How long does a cot bed last?
3 to 5 years as a cot, then 2 to 3 years as a toddler bed once the side drops. Total lifespan is around 5 to 8 years. Look for tested 25kg-plus capacity on the mattress base for the toddler phase; lighter bases warp.
Best material for kids bedroom furniture?
Solid pine and oak survive being climbed on, drawn on and bashed; cleans with a damp cloth and re-oils when scratched. MDF with melamine wrap is cheaper but chips at the corners by year 2 and shows damp from spilled drinks. Avoid glass shelving anywhere under age 11.
How do I childproof a bedroom?
Anchor every freestanding piece of furniture taller than the child to the wall with a brace strap (the IKEA recall in 2016 turned this from advice into industry standard). Cover sockets, fit window restrictors at any upstairs window, run blind cords through a safety cleat. Loose rugs go on a non-slip underlay.