What Colour Should Nightstands Be?
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Time to read 8 min
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Time to read 8 min
Nightstand colour should complement your bedroom's overall palette, either by matching your bed frame's finish for a cohesive look or by introducing a contrasting tone for deliberate visual interest. The most effective nightstand colours anchor the room without competing with your bedding or wall colour.
This is one of those decorating decisions that feels small but genuinely shapes how restful your bedroom feels.
In this guide, we'll cover how to match nightstands to your bed, which colours work best (and which to avoid) in a bedroom setting, the key rules for styling bedside tables, and how to make yours look properly polished. I'll share practical colour pairings and real scenarios from years spent advising clients on bedroom design.
Nightstands do not need to match the bed frame exactly, but they should belong to the same colour family or finish category to avoid visual discord. Mismatched nightstands work best when one element, such as hardware finish or wood undertone, ties the pieces together cohesively.
The "everything must match" rule in bedroom design has softened considerably over the past decade, and for good reason. Perfect matching can actually make a room feel a bit sterile, as if everything came from the same flat-pack box on the same Tuesday. If you are browsing for a nightstand that works with your existing bed, the range of finishes available today makes tonal coordination far easier than it used to be.
What matters far more is tonal harmony. If your bed frame is a warm walnut, a nightstand in pale oak or rich amber will feel intentional. Pair it with something cool-toned and grey, though, and the pieces will fight each other across the room.
That said, there are moments where an exact match is absolutely the right call. In smaller bedrooms particularly, matching nightstands and bed frames create a calmer, less visually busy environment. I often recommend this approach to clients whose rooms have a lot going on already, whether that's bold wallpaper, ornate cornicing, or a feature window. The furniture can afford to recede when the architecture is doing the talking.
Highly saturated or very dark nightstand colours, such as deep burgundy, bright cobalt, or matte black in small rooms, can make a bedroom feel heavier and less restful because they draw the eye rather than settling it. Bedrooms benefit from colour choices that calm the nervous system rather than stimulate it.
There's also a practical dimension here that often gets overlooked. Very dark nightstand surfaces show every fingerprint, water ring, and speck of dust with merciless clarity. I once had a client who fell in love with a pair of glossy black lacquered nightstands. Beautiful in the showroom, genuinely exhausting to live with.
Bright whites in harsh, blue-toned finishes can be equally problematic. They photograph beautifully but read as clinical in natural light, particularly in north-facing bedrooms where light is already cool and flat. If you love a white nightstand (and there are excellent reasons to), lean towards warm whites with a slight cream or linen undertone rather than a stark brilliant white.
Highly glossy finishes in any colour amplify light in ways that can feel unsettling in a room designed for rest. A satin or matte finish in almost any colour will almost always outperform a high-gloss equivalent in a bedroom context. The NHS's guidance on sleep environments notes that visual calm is a genuine factor in sleep quality, which gives you scientific backing next time someone questions your decorating logic.
Bed Frame Finish |
Works Well With |
Avoid |
|---|---|---|
Dark walnut / espresso |
Cream, warm white, cognac leather, brass-hardware pieces |
Cool grey, painted mint, black matte |
White painted |
White (match), light oak, pale grey, soft sage |
Heavy dark woods, overly rustic finishes |
Light oak / blond wood |
White, warm grey, terracotta, linen |
High-gloss black, jewel-toned lacquer |
Black metal |
White marble-top, cream, charcoal, aged brass |
Overly ornate wood finishes |
Upholstered (fabric/velvet) |
Matching lacquer, brushed metal, mirrored |
Competing heavily textured wood grain |
Rattan / natural |
White, cream, terracotta, dusty pink |
Dark lacquer, chrome |
This table illustrates a consistent principle: warm finishes pair best with warm finishes, and the nightstand's undertone should mirror, not contradict, the bed's primary tone.
Highly saturated or very dark nightstand colours, such as deep burgundy, bright cobalt, or matte black in small rooms, can make a bedroom feel heavier and less restful because they draw the eye rather than settling it. Bedrooms benefit from colour choices that calm the nervous system rather than stimulate it.
There's also a practical dimension here that often gets overlooked. Very dark nightstand surfaces show every fingerprint, water ring, and speck of dust with merciless clarity. I once had a client who fell in love with a pair of glossy black lacquered nightstands. Beautiful in the showroom, genuinely exhausting to live with.
Bright whites in harsh, blue-toned finishes can be equally problematic. They photograph beautifully but read as clinical in natural light, particularly in north-facing bedrooms where light is already cool and flat. If you love a white nightstand (and there are excellent reasons to), lean towards warm whites with a slight cream or linen undertone rather than a stark brilliant white.
Selecting a nightstand colour involves evaluating your existing bedroom palette, lighting conditions, bed frame finish, and personal sleep environment preferences in sequence before committing to a final shade. A methodical approach prevents costly mistakes and ensures the chosen colour serves the room for years.
This process sounds rather more formal than it needs to be in practice. Think of it as a quick checklist before you click "buy" rather than a formal design consultation.
This checklist walks through the key steps for choosing the right nightstand colour for your bedroom.
What colour should your nightstands be? The honest answer is: whichever colour creates a sense of calm and cohesion in your specific room, chosen by understanding your existing palette, your light quality, and your practical needs rather than following a universal rule.
Start by looking at what you already have. Your bed frame's undertone is the anchor point for everything else. Build outward from there with a nightstand finish that shares its warmth or coolness, and you'll rarely go wrong. Keep the surface colour calm, the finish matte or satin rather than high gloss, and the styling minimal.
A bedroom is the one room in your home that exists entirely for your benefit. The nightstand sitting beside you as you wind down at the end of the day deserves a little more thought than most furniture decisions get, and a little less anxiety about whether it's technically "correct." Get the colour and finish broadly right, keep the surface edited, light it warmly, and your bedroom will reward you every single night.
Three key takeaways:
Nightstands do not need to match the bed frame exactly, but they should share an undertone or finish element to feel cohesive. Mixing materials and finishes works well when one detail, such as hardware colour or wood warmth, visually connects the two pieces.
Warm white and natural oak are consistently the most popular nightstand finishes in UK and US homes because they complement a wide range of wall colours and bedding palettes. Both are neutral enough to work in nearly any bedroom without dominating the overall scheme.
Nightstands can absolutely be a different colour from other bedroom furniture, particularly if they share a finish element like hardware or material type. A deliberately contrasting nightstand can function as a focal accent when the rest of the room's palette is kept neutral.
Pale, warm-toned nightstands in white, cream, or light oak make small bedrooms feel more spacious because lighter surfaces reflect available light rather than absorbing it. Wall-mounted floating nightstands in pale finishes are particularly effective because they expose the floor, visually expanding the room.
Mismatched nightstands work well when both pieces share at least one visual element, such as height, finish tone, or hardware colour. They work best in rooms with an eclectic or collected aesthetic rather than a strictly contemporary or traditional scheme.
Cool-toned grey bedrooms pair best with white, pale oak, or blush-toned nightstands that introduce warmth without clashing. For a more dramatic look, a deep charcoal or black nightstand creates a tonal scheme that reads as intentional and sophisticated.
Bedside lamps do not need to match the nightstand but should complement it through finish or tone. A brass lamp on a warm wooden nightstand or a white ceramic lamp on a pale nightstand creates natural harmony without requiring an exact match.
In darker bedrooms with deep wall colours, choose nightstands in pale or mid-toned finishes to prevent the pieces from disappearing visually against the walls. A light oak or cream nightstand against a deep navy or charcoal wall creates useful contrast that grounds the bedside area without competing with the boldness of the walls.