# Sideboards and Buffets: Where They Earn Their Place

**By Megafurniture Admin** · 2026-05-28

![Sideboard buffet with open cabinet storage for plates and bowls beside a dining area](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/sideboard-buffet-storage-for-dining-room-tableware.jpg?v=1779946905)

A sideboard is one of the few pieces of furniture that can change the way a room functions without drawing attention to itself. It holds things, grounds the wall it sits against, and gives the room a horizontal line that dining tables and sofas rarely provide on their own. In a first home, where storage is tight and every square metre has to earn its keep, that combination of utility and visual composure is not a small thing.

This guide is written for households setting up a first home in Singapore, whether a three-room or four-room HDB flat, a resale unit being refreshed, or a smaller condominium. It covers where a sideboard genuinely earns its place, where it does not, and how to choose one that holds its character over years of daily use.

Quick Answer: A sideboard earns its place in a dining room or living room where wall storage is needed and a low horizontal profile works better than a cabinet. The right piece is typically 140 cm to 180 cm wide, sits 75 cm to 85 cm high, and is built on a solid frame with durable surface material. In well-planned spaces, it doubles as a media console, display surface, and linen storage in one.

## The Case for a Sideboard in a Singapore Home

Most Singapore homes are not short on vertical storage. Tall wardrobes, built-in kitchen cabinetry, and overhead storage units are common. What they tend to lack is horizontal storage at waist height, the kind of surface that receives things coming in from outside, holds items in daily rotation, and anchors a wall without filling it from floor to ceiling.

A sideboard fills that gap specifically. At 75 cm to 85 cm high, it sits below eye level, which keeps the room feeling open. It does not interrupt the visual field the way a tall bookcase does. And because it reads as a composed piece of furniture rather than a storage unit, it holds the room together in a way that freestanding shelving rarely manages.

In a four-room HDB dining area, for instance, a sideboard placed against the wall opposite the dining table gives the room a second anchor. The table does the practical work of gathering; the sideboard holds the overflow quietly. On a Saturday evening, with dinner on the table and the sideboard carrying the serving dishes and a bottle of wine, the room functions as a room rather than a corridor with a table in it.

## Sideboard or Buffet: The Distinction Worth Knowing

The terms are used interchangeably in most Singapore furniture showrooms, and the distinction has blurred. Traditionally, a buffet is a slightly taller piece, originally designed for serving food at the table, while a sideboard is lower and broader, designed to store tableware, linen, and table accessories. In practice, both occupy the same wall, serve the same storage function, and are chosen on the same criteria.

What the distinction does signal is height. If you are considering a piece for a dining room and you want a surface tall enough to serve from comfortably, a buffet at 85 cm to 90 cm is the considered choice. If the surface is primarily decorative or display-led, a sideboard at 75 cm to 80 cm sits better in the room and keeps the wall from feeling heavy.

## Where a Sideboard Actually Works

Not every room benefits from one. The honest answer is that a sideboard earns its place in three situations, and struggles in a fourth.

### Dining rooms and dining areas

This is where the piece was designed to live. Storage for tableware, serving pieces, placemats, and table linen, paired with a surface for serving and display. In a combined living-dining layout, a sideboard positioned on the dining side of the room does double work: it defines the dining zone without a physical partition.

### Living rooms as media consoles

A sideboard 160 cm to 180 cm wide at 45 cm to 50 cm depth can carry a television, conceal cable boxes and streaming devices, and provide closed storage for remotes, chargers, and the miscellany that accumulates around a screen. This is one of the most practical applications in a smaller Singapore home, because it replaces a purpose-built TV unit with a piece that reads as furniture rather than electronics furniture.

### Entryways in larger flats

A shorter sideboard at 100 cm to 120 cm wide, placed in an entry corridor or foyer, receives keys, bags, and daily items without clutter. In a five-room flat or larger condominium where the entry corridor allows it, this use is among the most useful in the home.

### Where it struggles

A sideboard placed in a room that has no clear wall for it, or in a space under 10 square metres, tends to block movement rather than aid it. A piece that cannot sit flush against a wall, with at least 90 cm of clear passage in front of it, will make the room feel smaller, not more considered. If the wall is not there, the piece is not the answer.

## Dimensions: What Fits a Singapore Home

    

**Room Type**

**Recommended Width**

**Height**

**Depth**

**Notes**

3-room HDB dining area

120 cm – 150 cm

75 cm – 80 cm

35 cm – 40 cm

Keep depth shallow to preserve passage

4-room HDB dining room

150 cm – 180 cm

80 cm – 85 cm

40 cm – 45 cm

Full-size piece works well here

4-room HDB living room, as TV console

160 cm – 200 cm

45 cm – 55 cm

40 cm – 50 cm

Lower profile keeps screen at viewing height

Condominium dining or living

140 cm – 220 cm

75 cm – 90 cm

40 cm – 50 cm

Room for a taller or wider piece

Entryway / foyer

90 cm – 120 cm

75 cm – 85 cm

30 cm – 35 cm

Shallow console-style sideboard; keep passage clear

One dimension most buyers overlook is depth. A sideboard at 50 cm depth in a dining room with a 90 cm passage between it and the table will feel tight when chairs are pulled out. Measure the available passage with chairs occupied, not empty.

## What the Frame and Surface Reveal

![Wooden sideboard used as entryway and living room storage in a compact Singapore home](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/sideboard-entryway-living-room-storage-singapore-home.jpg?v=1779946926)

A sideboard receives daily handling: drawers opened and closed, items placed on the surface, doors swung in and out over years. The frame material and surface finish are what determine whether the piece holds its character for a decade or begins to show wear within two or three years.

For the frame, kiln-dried solid wood or engineered wood with solid wood joints is the standard that holds. Kiln-dried timber has had its moisture content reduced in controlled conditions, which means it resists warping and cracking when Singapore's humidity cycles through its seasonal range. A frame that skips this stage may look identical in the showroom and feel different within a year.

Surface finishes divide broadly into three: lacquered MDF or wood veneer, solid wood, and stone or stone-effect tops. Lacquered surfaces are practical and wipe clean; they suit a dining sideboard that will see glasses and serving dishes regularly. Solid wood develops a patina over time and suits a display-led piece in a living room. Stone tops read as composed and are heat-resistant, which matters if the sideboard is being used for serving hot dishes.

This is where the cura dei dettagli — care for details — of construction separates a piece that ages gracefully from one that merely looks the part on the showroom floor. Soft-close hinges and drawer runners are the detail most often cut at lower price points; they are also the detail most felt in daily use.

## Affordable Luxury at This Piece's Price Point

Sideboards sit in a relatively wide price range in Singapore. At the lower end, flat-pack and assembly-required pieces use particleboard frames and laminate surfaces; they are light, easy to move, and show wear within a few years of regular use. At the higher end, solid timber or stone-topped pieces with soft-close hardware and hand-finished surfaces are built to outlast the room they first sit in.

Esteller's affordable luxury range, from approximately SGD 600 to SGD 2,500, carries pieces built on solid or engineered wood frames with quality hardware and surface finishes that hold up to daily handling. Every piece in the range comes with a three-year warranty, which is the construction's way of expressing confidence rather than marketing's. Free delivery applies on orders above SGD 500, and the 4.8 rating across 96 Google reviews reflects how these pieces have settled into actual homes over time.

The practical test for a sideboard at this price point is simple: open and close every drawer and door in the showroom. Soft-close hardware on a well-fitted drawer tells you more about the construction than any specification sheet can.

## Styling a Sideboard: Less Than You Think

Honestly, this is the area where most online guidance overcomplicates things. A sideboard does not need a curated vignette. It needs a clear surface that is easy to wipe, drawers and cabinets that close properly, and perhaps two or three objects on top that are actually used or genuinely liked.

A low lamp, a plant, and a bowl for keys: that is a composed surface. The impulse to style a sideboard with symmetrical object groupings, stacked books, and candles in threes is an interior-photography convention, not a living convention. In a first home, the sideboard that earns its place is the one whose top is not cluttered by Tuesday.

We've seen this with first-home buyers in particular: the piece that photographs beautifully in the showroom sometimes becomes the flat surface that accumulates mail, charger cables, and takeaway bags within a week of moving in. Plan for how it will actually be used, not how it will look in the first photograph you take of the room. If the surface needs a catch-all drawer, make sure the piece has one.

## Sideboard Alongside Other Living Room Furniture

A sideboard rarely sits in isolation. In a living room, it reads differently depending on what surrounds it. A low sideboard used as a TV console sits in direct relation to the sofa opposite; the proportion between them, the distance, and the height of the screen above the sideboard all interact. Browse the [living room furniture collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/living-room-furniture) to see how sideboards, consoles, and seating are proportioned against one another.

In a dining room, the sideboard relates most closely to the dining table and chairs. The [dining room collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/dining-room) includes tables and storage pieces that share a design language, which makes finding a coherent combination more straightforward than mixing across ranges.

A [coffee or side table](https://esteller.sg/collections/coffee-side-table) alongside a living-room sideboard also repays attention: the horizontal lines of both pieces, when composed at similar heights, give the room a settled, low profile that reads well in Singapore apartments where ceiling heights are standard rather than generous.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is the difference between a sideboard and a buffet?

In practice, the terms describe the same piece of furniture. Traditionally, a buffet was slightly taller and designed for serving food, while a sideboard was lower and broader, built for storing tableware and linen. In most Singapore showrooms today, both terms refer to low horizontal storage pieces for dining rooms and living rooms. Height is the practical distinction: a buffet tends to sit at 85 cm to 90 cm, while a sideboard sits at 75 cm to 80 cm.

### Can a sideboard double as a TV console?

Yes, and this is one of its most useful applications in a Singapore home. A sideboard 160 cm to 200 cm wide and 45 cm to 55 cm high can carry a television, conceal cable boxes and streaming devices in its cabinets, and provide closed storage for the accessories that accumulate around a screen. The closed storage is what makes it more functional than a dedicated TV rack in most living rooms.

### What size sideboard fits a four-room HDB?

In a four-room HDB dining area, a sideboard 150 cm to 180 cm wide at 40 cm to 45 cm depth fits well against most walls. In a living room used as a TV console, 160 cm to 200 cm is workable. The critical measurement is passage width: with chairs pulled out from a dining table, or with people moving through the living room, there should be at least 90 cm of clear space between the sideboard and any opposing furniture.

### How do I choose between a solid wood and a veneer or lacquered sideboard?

Solid wood develops a patina over time and suits a piece positioned as a display or living room anchor. Lacquered or veneer surfaces are more consistent in finish, wipe clean more easily, and suit a dining room where the surface will see regular use with glasses and serving dishes. Both are valid; the choice depends on how the piece will be used daily, not on which sounds more premium. A kiln-dried frame underneath either surface is the construction detail that determines longevity.

### Is a sideboard worth buying for a first home?

If the dining or living room has a clear wall of 120 cm or more and a storage need that shelving does not serve well, yes. A sideboard is one of the few pieces that provides practical closed storage, a display surface, and visual grounding for a room simultaneously. For first-home buyers, the piece that tends to earn its place most reliably is a mid-size sideboard in the dining room, where it handles tableware, linen, and serving overflow in a single piece of furniture.

## Conclusion: A Piece That Holds the Room Together

A sideboard does not announce itself. It holds what the room needs, grounds the wall it sits against, and gives the eye a place to settle between the furniture and the ceiling. In a first home where every piece has to justify its floor space, that quiet combination of storage and visual composure is worth choosing with care.

Esteller's [living room furniture collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/living-room-furniture) includes sideboards and consoles across the affordable luxury range, from approximately SGD 600 to SGD 2,500, each backed by the three-year warranty and free delivery above SGD 500. New pieces join the collection through the year, so it is always worth a fresh look when the measurements are settled and the shortlist is forming.

A piece chosen with the right dimensions, the right construction, and a clear sense of how it will be used daily does not need to be revisited. It simply remains.

The showroom at 604 Sembawang Road, #01-18 Sembawang Shopping Centre, is open daily from 10am to 10pm. Opening and closing drawers in person, checking the depth against your floor plan, and seeing the surface finish under the room's light resolves the questions a screen cannot. The design team can also be reached at +65 6348 3144 or [hello@esteller.sg](mailto:hello@esteller.sg) to plan a visit ahead.

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> Source: [Esteller Furniture](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/sideboards-and-buffets-where-they-earn-their-place)
