Choosing Garden Furniture for a UK Garden
The biggest mistake people make with garden furniture is buying for a dry July and forgetting about the other eleven months. UK gardens are wet, shaded for long periods, and subject to temperature swings that test materials hard. Furniture that looks good in a showroom can warp, rust, or fade badly within a season if the frame and surface materials aren't right for outdoor exposure. The sets in this collection are built specifically for that reality — powder-coated aluminium and galvanised steel frames, weather-resistant Polywood surfaces, and FSC certified Acacia timber that handles outdoor conditions without needing annual treatment.
"The question we always ask people is: what will you actually use it for? A dining set needs a table big enough to eat at comfortably, chairs that aren't a chore to move, and cushions you don't have to rush inside when it rains. A lounge set needs to be low enough to feel relaxed but not so low it's awkward to get out of. A bistro set should tuck away easily. Get the function right first — the style follows from there."
Garden Ornaments Team
Types of Garden Furniture
Corner Sets
Corner sets make efficient use of space by fitting into the angle of a wall, fence, or building. An L-shaped sofa section and a coffee table typically seat four to six people in a compact footprint. They work well on patios, decking, and courtyard gardens where a conventional sofa arrangement would feel exposed or awkward. Most include a central table at a height suited to drinks and snacks rather than full meals.
Dining Sets
Garden dining sets are built around a table large enough for proper meals — typically 140cm to 160cm long and seating four to six. The table height and chair height matter: the gap between seat and tabletop should be 27cm to 30cm for comfortable dining. Look for chairs with arms if you plan long meals. Polywood and aluminium table tops are the most practical — they wipe clean and don't require seasonal sealing.
Lounge Sets
Lounge sets sit lower than dining furniture and prioritise comfort over practicality. A typical 4-seat lounge set includes a sofa, one or two chairs, and a low coffee table. They suit gardens used for relaxing rather than eating. The lower seat height makes them feel more casual and social. Cushion depth and quality matter more with lounge furniture — you're sitting in it for longer stretches.
Bistro Sets
A bistro set is the smallest practical option — a table and two chairs, sized for a morning coffee or a meal for two. Tables are typically 45cm to 75cm across. They suit balconies, small patios, side returns, and any garden where space is genuinely limited. Some include footstools for a more relaxed feel. A well-chosen bistro set can make an otherwise unused corner of a garden into a usable space.
What to Look for When Buying Garden Furniture
| Feature | What to Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Frame material | Powder-coated aluminium or galvanised steel | Both resist rust without seasonal treatment |
| Table surface | Polywood, tempered glass, or aluminium slat | All wipe clean and handle rain without damage |
| Timber components | FSC certified Acacia or teak | Durability without the environmental cost of uncertified wood |
| Cushions | Shower-resistant coating, stain protection | Means they survive a downpour without needing to come inside |
| Table size | 140cm+ for 6 diners, 90–100cm for 4 | Too small and meals feel cramped; too large and the set dominates the space |
| Seat height | 43–47cm for dining, 35–40cm for lounge | Dining height suits eating; lounge height suits relaxing |
| Assembly | Check carton count and estimated time | Larger sets can take 45–60 minutes and benefit from two people |
| Warranty | Minimum 2 years on frame and materials | A meaningful warranty signals confidence in the build quality |
Matching Furniture to Your Garden Size
Leave at least 90cm of clearance around a dining table for chairs to pull out comfortably. On a 4m x 4m patio, a 6-seat dining set will fill most of the space — which may be fine if dining is the primary use, but leaves little room for anything else. A corner set is often the better choice on a smaller patio: it uses the perimeter rather than the centre, leaving the middle of the space open for movement.
For very small spaces — a balcony or a courtyard under 3m x 3m — a bistro set is the only furniture type that genuinely fits without dominating. Two chairs and a small table, placed at a corner or against a wall, take up less than 1.5 square metres and can often be folded or stacked when not in use.
Lounge sets need more depth than dining sets because of the reclined seating position. Allow at least 1.5m of clear space in front of any lounge sofa so people can stand up without stepping back into a wall or planter.
Care and Maintenance
Powder-coated aluminium and galvanised steel frames need very little attention. Wipe down with warm soapy water at the start and end of each season. Check frames for any chips or scratches in spring — touch up bare metal with a matching outdoor paint to stop corrosion at the exposed point. The frames themselves can stay outside all year without covers.
Polywood surfaces wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive pads or harsh chemical cleaners. FSC Acacia benefits from an occasional coat of teak or hardwood oil to maintain its natural colour — once or twice a season is enough. This is cosmetic rather than structural; the wood handles outdoor conditions without oiling, but the finish stays richer with it.
Cushions should be stored indoors when not in use during extended wet periods or over winter. The shower-resistant coatings handle rain well in the short term but prolonged damp encourages mildew in the foam core. A quick wipe-down and dry storage extends cushion life significantly.
Related Collections
Complete your outdoor space with a metal gazebo for shelter over a dining area, or add a garden firepit to extend evening use into the cooler months. Garden screens and panels create privacy without the weight of a fence. For decorative pieces that sit alongside your furniture — planters, bird baths, sundials — browse our garden décor collection.
Frequently Asked Questions
Powder-coated aluminium is the most weather-resistant frame material for UK gardens. It doesn't rust, doesn't require seasonal treatment, and holds its finish for years. Paired with a Polywood or aluminium table top — both fully weatherproof — you get a set that genuinely stays out year-round without maintenance. Galvanised steel is similarly robust. Timber adds warmth but needs occasional oiling to maintain its appearance.
Aluminium and steel frames can stay outside year-round without covers. Polywood and rope weave surfaces handle frost and rain without damage. The practical exception is cushions — bring these in over winter or during extended wet periods to prevent mildew in the foam. If you do use furniture covers, make sure they breathe; non-breathable covers trap condensation and can cause more damage than leaving furniture uncovered.
A 6-seat dining table should be at least 150cm long and 85cm wide. 160 x 100cm is comfortable for six people with room for serving dishes on the table. Rectangular tables seat more people than round ones for the same footprint. Allow 60cm of table length per person on each side. Don't forget the clearance around the table — 90cm minimum so chairs can pull out without hitting a wall or fence.
Polywood is a resin-moulded composite that looks like teak but needs none of the maintenance. It doesn't warp, split, crack, or fade the way real wood does outdoors. It won't absorb moisture or require annual oiling. For garden furniture in the UK climate, Polywood outperforms real wood on practicality in almost every situation. The only thing real wood offers that Polywood doesn't is the genuine grain and feel of natural timber — if that matters to you, FSC certified Acacia is the better choice.
Store cushions in a dry place when not in use — a garage, shed, or indoor store cupboard. Bring them in over winter. If cushions do get wet, stand them on their edge to drain and dry rather than laying them flat. Shower-resistant cushions shed surface water quickly but the foam core still absorbs moisture if left wet for extended periods. A cushion storage bag or box kept in a shed is the simplest long-term solution.
FSC certification guarantees the timber comes from responsibly managed forests — it is worth specifying where you have the choice. The certification covers the full supply chain from forest to finished product. Uncertified tropical hardwoods are often sourced from forests without proper management controls. For garden furniture with Acacia or teak components, FSC certification is the clearest signal that the wood has been sourced ethically.
Need Help Choosing?
Not sure which set suits your garden? Get in touch and we'll point you in the right direction.
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