- Home Improvement & Decor
How to Make a Small Living Room Look Bigger: 15 Designer-Approved Tricks
Stop feeling cramped! Master the art of space-saving with 15 designer-approved tricks to make your small living room feel bright, airy, and twice its size without moving a single wall.
Introduction
Living in a small space doesn’t mean you have to live in a cramped one. Whether you’re in a cozy studio apartment in New York, a starter home in Texas, or a compact condo in California, a small living room can feel open, airy, and stylish with the right design moves.
The good news? You don’t need to knock down walls or blow your budget. Interior designers use a handful of clever visual and spatial tricks that make even the tiniest rooms feel twice their size.
In this guide, we’ll walk you through 15 proven, designer-approved tricks to make your small living room look bigger — using light, color, furniture placement, and a few smart decor choices. Ready to transform your space? Let’s dive in.
Why Small Living Rooms Feel Cramped (And How to Fix It)
Before jumping into solutions, it helps to understand why a small room feels small. The main culprits are:
- Clutter and too much furniture — oversized or excessive pieces eat up visual space
- Dark paint colors — absorb light and make walls close in
- Poor lighting — shadows create a heavy, boxed-in feeling
- Low ceilings (or visually low ones) — horizontal lines emphasize width over height
- Mismatched scale — mixing large and tiny pieces creates visual chaos
Once you understand these, the fixes become obvious.
15 Designer-Approved Tricks to Make a Small Living Room Look Bigger
1. Choose Light, Neutral Wall Colors
Color is the single biggest changer in a small room. Light colors — think soft whites, warm creams, pale grays, and sage greens — reflect natural light and visually push walls outward.
Best colors for small living rooms (USA designers recommend):
- Benjamin Moore Chantilly Lace (OC-17)
- Sherwin-Williams Alabaster (SW 7008)
- Behr Silver Drop
Pro Tip: Paint your ceiling the same color as your walls, or one shade lighter. This removes the visual “lid” effect, making ceilings feel taller.
2. Use Mirrors Strategically
Mirrors are a designer’s secret weapon. A large mirror placed opposite a window bounces natural light around the room, creating the illusion of depth and essentially doubling the perceived space.
Best placement:
- Opposite a window for maximum light reflection
- On the longest wall to extend the room visually
- Leaning a large floor mirror against a wall for a casual, spacious feel
Even a gallery wall of smaller mirrors can add dimension without overwhelming the space.
3. Choose Furniture with Exposed Legs
Furniture that sits directly on the floor visually “blocks” the room. Pieces with legs — sofas, chairs, coffee tables — allow light to flow underneath, creating a sense of openness.
Look for:
- Mid-century modern sofas with tapered wood legs
- Accent chairs with slim metal frames
- Raised console tables instead of heavy buffets
4. Go Vertical with Shelving
When floor space is limited, go up. Tall bookshelves and wall-mounted storage draw the eye upward, making ceilings feel higher and freeing up valuable floor space.
Ideas:
- Floor-to-ceiling built-in shelves on one wall
- Floating shelves above the sofa
- Vertical ladder shelves in corners
This trick works especially well in living rooms that double as home offices — which is increasingly common for remote workers across the US. Looking to set up a functional home workspace? Check out our guide on Budget-Friendly Home Office Setup Ideas for more smart space-saving tips.
5. Invest in Multi-Functional Furniture
Every piece of furniture in a small living room should earn its place. Multi-functional pieces save space without sacrificing style.
Top picks:
- Ottoman with hidden storage (serves as a coffee table AND storage)
- Sofa with a pull-out bed for guests
- Nesting tables instead of a large coffee table
- Storage benches under windows
6. Stick to a Consistent Color Palette
Too many colors create visual noise, making a room feel chaotic and smaller. Stick to 2–3 colors throughout the space.
The formula that works:
- 60% dominant neutral (walls, sofa)
- 30% secondary tone (rug, curtains)
- 10% accent (pillows, art, plants)
7. Hang Curtains High and Wide
This is one of the most underrated tricks. Hanging curtain rods close to the ceiling (even if windows start mid-wall) and extending rods beyond the window frame on each side creates the illusion of larger, taller windows — and a bigger room.
Rule of thumb: Mount rods 4–6 inches above the window frame and extend 6–12 inches on each side.
8. Use a Large Area Rug (Not a Small One)
Counterintuitively, a small rug makes a room look smaller. A large area rug that fits under all major furniture anchors the space and creates a cohesive, expansive feel.
Sizing guide for living rooms:
- Small room: 5×8 or 8×10 rug minimum
- All front legs of the sofa and chairs should sit on the rug
9. Declutter Ruthlessly
No design trick can overcome clutter. In small living rooms, less is genuinely more.
Quick declutter checklist:
- Remove furniture you rarely use
- Store seasonal items out of the room
- Use closed storage for remotes, chargers, and magazines
- Limit decorative objects to intentional, meaningful pieces
10. Choose Transparent or Glass Furniture
Acrylic and glass furniture — ghost chairs, lucite coffee tables, glass side tables — take up physical space but virtually zero visual space. Light passes through them, keeping the room feeling open.
11. Embrace Monochromatic Styling
A monochromatic color scheme (different shades and textures of one color family) creates seamless flow through a room, eliminating the visual “stops” that make spaces feel chopped up.
12. Use Scaled-Down Furniture
Oversized sectionals belong in large living rooms. For smaller spaces, opt for apartment-sized sofas (typically 70–85 inches wide), armless chairs, and slim-profile consoles. Measurement tip: Always tape out furniture dimensions on your floor before buying. What looks small in a showroom might overwhelm your room.
13. Keep the Floor Visible
The more floor you can see, the bigger the room feels. Avoid pushing all furniture to walls (a common mistake) — floating furniture slightly away from walls with visible floor gaps actually creates more spaciousness.
14. Add Plants to Create Depth
Plants add life and dimension to a small room. A tall plant in a corner draws the eye upward; smaller plants on shelves add layers of visual depth for low-maintenance options like pothos, snake plants, or fiddle leaf figs.
15. Maximize Natural Light
Finally, nothing opens up a room like natural light. Maximize yours by:
- Keeping windows clean and unobstructed
- Using sheer curtains instead of heavy drapes
- Adding a skylight if possible (even a solar tube)
- Placing mirrors to bounce light into dark corners
Quick Reference: Do’s and Don’ts for Small Living Rooms
| DO | DON’T |
| Use light, neutral colors | Use dark, saturated wall colors |
| Hang curtains high and wide | Hang curtains at window height |
| Use large area rugs | Use undersized rugs |
| Choose furniture with legs | Choose furniture that sits on the floor |
| Go vertical with storage | Fill all floor space with furniture |
| Keep it decluttered | Overcrowded with decorative items |
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the best color to make a small living room look bigger?
Light, neutral colors like soft white, warm beige, pale gray, and light sage green reflect the most light and visually expand walls. Avoid dark or saturated colors.
Q: Should I use a small rug in a small living room?
No, a small rug actually makes a room look smaller. Always choose a rug large enough for the front legs of all major furniture to rest on it.
Q: Does removing furniture make a small living room look bigger?
Yes. Editing your furniture to only essential, properly scaled pieces is one of the most effective ways to open up a small space.
Q: What furniture style works best in small living rooms?
Mid-century modern and Scandinavian styles work well — they feature clean lines, light colors, and furniture on legs that keep visual weight low.
Final Thoughts
Making a small living room look bigger isn’t about spending a fortune — it’s about making smart, intentional choices with color, furniture, light, and layout. Apply even half of these 15 tricks, and you’ll be amazed by how much more spacious your room feels.
Start with the highest-impact changes: repaint with a light neutral, hang curtains high, and add a large mirror. Then layer in the rest at your own pace.
Which trick are you trying first?
Drop it in the comments below — we’d love to see your transformation!