Why designers can’t stop buying tiny tables

Why designers can’t stop buying tiny tables

If the coffee table is the responsible older sister, the cocktail table is the younger, cooler one with better taste in shoes. Physically, she’s tiny, but she makes an impression – and in 2025, she’s everywhere. Designers are scaling down with this furniture trend, delivering sculptural, small-scale tables that serve just enough purpose to justify their beauty. CB2’s got them. Joon + Loloi too. And fellow magpies certainly won’t sleep on the crystal confections from Reflections Copenhagen.

But why the hubbub? And realistically, how many cocktail tables can one room take before it starts resembling a showroom?

According to New York-based designer Antonio Pippo, the answer to the first is simple: ‘A great cocktail table can stand on its own without any accessories – it can feel like a piece of art,’ he says. It’s the punctuation mark in a room: ‘An excellent cocktail table is like the period at the end of a seating group sentence,’ not the exclamation point.

retro 70s style living room from the lulu and georgia fall 2025 collection styled with a large woven rug, velvet brown sofa, and a marble and wood coffee table

(Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)

Though the name implies a certain level of revelry, tiny tables aren’t just for martinis. ‘Cocktail tables are some of the most versatile pieces in a room,’ say Joshua Evan Goldfarb and Michael Edward Moriano, founders of the bi-coastal design studio Evan Edward. ‘Not only are they practical for placing a book or coffee by your favorite spot on the sofa, but they also add dimension and provide a perfect landing place for flowers, candles, and other small accents.’

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