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The console table is the unsung hero of a well-designed home. It’s the first piece you see walking in, the surface that sets the tone in the first three seconds, and one of the hardest-working forms in furniture — landing keys and mail in an entryway, anchoring a floating sofa, holding lamps and objects in a hallway. Get it right and a blank wall becomes a styled, welcoming moment; get it wrong and the entry feels like an afterthought.
We evaluated the field on construction and materials, proportion and footprint, storage, and how each suits its job — entryway, sofa-back, or hallway. Eight earned a place. Per our methodology, these assessments are research-based, drawn from construction specs and owner reports.
Our Top Picks at a Glance
- Best overall: West Elm console table
- Best with storage: West Elm Slatted storage console
- Best statement/stone: West Elm Louis concrete-look console
- Best modern/narrow: CB2 console table
- Best classic/wood: Pottery Barn console table
- Best designer look: Lulu and Georgia console
- Best organic/coastal: Serena & Lily console
- Best value: Article console table
1. West Elm Console Table — Best Overall
West Elm’s console range is the most broadly useful — narrow entryway styles, storage versions with drawers, and sofa-back options, in solid wood, metal, glass, and stone-topped designs that read polished and modern. The materials span natural wood tones to blackened metal and marble, the shapes from clean rectangles to soft ovals, and the brand’s reliable quality holds up to daily entryway use. For most people choosing one console, it’s the versatile, design-forward default.
- Narrow, storage, and sofa-back styles
- Solid wood, metal, glass, and stone options
- Polished, modern silhouettes
- Reliable everyday quality
- Premium pricing
- Confirm depth for narrow hallways
Best for: Most entryways and hallways wanting a versatile, design-forward console. The anchor of a welcoming entryway.
2. West Elm Slatted Storage Console — Best With Storage
For an entryway that needs to hide the daily clutter, the Slatted console is a hands-on favorite — fluted sliding doors conceal wide, deep shelves, the walnut frame pops against tall black metal legs, and at a low-profile 18 inches deep it suits tight spaces and small apartments. At about 67 inches across (roughly the length of a loveseat), it also works beautifully behind a sofa. The smart pick when storage and a slim footprint both matter.
- Fluted sliding doors hide deep shelves
- Slim 18-inch depth for tight spaces
- Handsome walnut-and-black-metal contrast
- Doubles as a sofa-back console
- Sliding doors need clearance to operate
- One finish-defining look
Best for: Entryways and small apartments needing hidden storage in a slim footprint. Fits our small-spaces guide.
3. West Elm Louis Concrete-Look Console — Best Statement/Stone
For an entry that should make an impression, the Louis brings a cratered, travertine-like concrete top that looks genuinely expensive and adds a luxe, architectural element. At just 65 inches across it stays manageable for small living spaces and dining rooms, while the stone-effect surface delivers the on-trend organic-modern look without natural stone’s full weight or maintenance. The statement pick for a modern-organic entry.
- Cratered, travertine-like concrete top
- Expensive, architectural look
- Manageable 65-inch width
- On-trend organic-modern aesthetic
- Concrete-look tops are heavy and can mark
- Statement surface commits the look
Best for: Modern-organic entries wanting a stone-look statement. Pairs with our modern organic style guide.
4. CB2 Console Table — Best Modern/Narrow
For the sleek, contemporary entry, CB2’s consoles deliver clean, minimalist design — narrow profiles, glass and metal and stone, architectural lines — at accessible prices. As CB2 skews modern and apartment-friendly, the narrow-depth designs are ideal for tight hallways and entries where a deeper console would crowd the path. The pick for a modern home wanting clean lines and a slim footprint.
- Clean, minimalist, architectural design
- Narrow profiles for tight hallways
- Glass, metal, and stone options
- Accessible price
- Narrow designs offer less surface/storage
- Strongly modern — less for traditional rooms
Best for: Modern homes and tight hallways wanting clean lines and a slim console.
5. Pottery Barn Console Table — Best Classic/Wood
For timeless, substantial consoles that suit traditional and transitional homes, Pottery Barn delivers — solid-wood construction, classic silhouettes (often with drawers and a lower shelf), and finishes built to coordinate and not to date. Reliable quality and the brand’s familiar aesthetic make these the safe, handsome choice for a classic entryway, and the storage-friendly designs handle the practical reality of a front-door drop zone.
- Substantial solid-wood construction
- Classic silhouettes with drawers and shelves
- Won’t-date finishes; reliable quality
- Practical entryway storage
- Classic look — less for modern rooms
- Premium pricing; can be deep
Best for: Traditional and transitional entryways wanting substantial, timeless storage. Pairs with our transitional style guide.
6. Lulu and Georgia Console — Best Designer Look
When the console is meant to be the entry’s design statement, Lulu and Georgia offers sculptural, elevated pieces — plinth and pedestal forms, mixed premium materials, often from named designers — that read as a considered, professional choice. A step up in price, repaid in distinctiveness; this is the console that makes a foyer look intentionally designed and announces the home’s aesthetic from the doorway.
- Sculptural, designer silhouettes
- Mixed premium materials
- Statement presence for a foyer
- Curated, current aesthetic
- Higher price for the distinctiveness
- Statement forms may offer less storage
Best for: Design-led entries wanting a sculptural statement console. More in our designers & collections guides.
7. Serena & Lily Console — Best Organic/Coastal
For the coastal and relaxed-elegant entry, Serena & Lily’s consoles — light woods, washed finishes, woven or cane detailing — bring breezy sophistication. They warm an entryway with natural texture and the brand’s signature relaxed-but-refined look, coordinating naturally with its broader coastal pieces. The natural choice for a coastal or organic foyer.
- Breezy, relaxed-elegant coastal aesthetic
- Light woods, washed finishes
- Woven and cane detailing
- Coordinates with the S&L look
- Premium pricing; committed coastal style
Best for: Coastal and organic entries. Pairs with our coastal style guide.
8. Article Console Table — Best Value
Article brings its direct-to-consumer value to consoles, with clean modern and mid-century silhouettes — warm wood, tapered legs, mixed materials — at prices that undercut the traditional retailers. The familiar trade-offs apply (limited customization, some assembly), but for a well-designed console that looks more expensive than it is, it’s the value standout, and it coordinates with the rest of an Article-furnished home.
- Strong price for designed consoles
- Clean mid-century, warm-wood silhouettes
- Coordinates with Article pieces
- Fast shipping
- Limited customization; some assembly
- Verify dimensions for your space
Best for: Value-minded modern and mid-century entryways.
How to Choose & Style a Console Table
Size it to the wall and the job. In an entryway, a console should span roughly half to two-thirds the wall it sits on, and sit around 30–34 inches high (table height) for dropping keys and mail. Behind a sofa, match the console’s height to within an inch or two of the sofa back, and keep it a few inches shorter than the sofa’s length.
Mind the depth in tight spaces. Narrow hallways and small entries need a shallow console (10–18 inches deep) so it doesn’t crowd the walking path. Depth, more than width, is what makes or breaks a console in a tight space — measure the clearance before you fall for a deep design.
Decide how much storage you need. A front-door drop zone benefits from drawers or a closed cabinet to hide keys, mail, and clutter; a purely decorative console or sofa-back table can be an open, leggy design. Be honest about whether the console needs to work or just to look good.
Style it in layers of three. The designer formula: anchor with a lamp or a large mirror/art above, add height with a stack of books or a vase, ground it with a tray or bowl for keys, and finish with one organic element (stems, a plant). Group in odd numbers and leave breathing room — the same edited approach from our styling ideas.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should a console table be?
In an entryway, aim for a console that spans roughly half to two-thirds the length of the wall it sits on. Behind a sofa, keep it a few inches shorter than the sofa’s length and match the height to within an inch or two of the sofa back. Proportion to the wall or sofa matters more than any fixed number.
How tall should a console table be?
A standard entryway or hallway console sits around 30–34 inches high — comfortable table height for dropping keys and mail and for hanging a mirror or art above. Behind a sofa, match the console height to the top of the sofa back (within an inch or two) for a cohesive look.
How deep should an entryway console be?
For narrow hallways and tight entries, choose a shallow console of about 10–18 inches deep so it doesn’t crowd the walking path — depth, more than width, makes or breaks a console in a small space. Measure your clearance first and leave comfortable room to pass.
How do I style a console table?
Use the rule of three: anchor with a lamp or a mirror/art above, add height with books or a vase, ground it with a tray or bowl for keys, and add one organic element like stems or a plant. Group items in odd numbers, vary the heights, and leave breathing room rather than crowding the surface.
Related Guides
Entryway & Hallway Hub · Best Oversized Mirrors · Best Table Lamps · Storage & Case Goods · 51 Luxury Living Room Ideas
