11 Ways to Make a Small Bedroom Look Bigger

If you have a small bedroom, you’re not alone—it’s one of the most common bedroom decorating challenges. You have to remodel to add actual square footage, but luckily, there are decorating tricks to fool the eye into seeing your bedroom as larger than it actually is.

Here are 11 bedrooms that show you how to make your room look bigger.

Use Vertical Space

bedroom with dark walls, taller headboard, photos on top half

Modern House Vibes

When you’re dealing with a small room, think vertical. You might not have much floor space, but by using the walls right up to the ceiling, you use the space you have more efficiently while drawing the eye upwards, making the room seem larger.

Built-in shelves that extend from floor to ceiling are a great way to add storage, interest, and visual space to a bedroom, but unfortunately, they aren’t an option for everyone. An easy alternative is investing in a tall headboard and hanging artwork or other decor above the bed, taking up the full extent of the space.

Choose Furniture With Legs

minimalist bedroom with wooden bed frame, large plant in corner

Home Consultant

Give your furniture a lift with legs to create an airy, open feel in the bedroom. Not every piece needs to be legged, but try to have at least one piece with some height, whether it’s your nightstands, dresser, or bed. The midcentury modern decorating style is perfect for small rooms, as most of the furniture is elevated on thin legs. The more floor and wall that shows, the larger your room will appear. Notice the bed frame in this room—the legs aren’t especially tall but add just enough height to help enlarge the space.

Match Window Treatments to the Walls

white bedroom with open windows, blue accent pillows on bed

Hannah Tyler Designs

While large bedrooms can make great use of drapes or blinds that contrast with the walls, it’s better to match your walls and window treatments in a small bedroom. This keeps the eye moving across the space, fooling it into seeing the bedroom as a little bit bigger than it really is. Notice how in the small, white bedroom shown here, paneling adds a bit of texture to the walls yet seamlessly blends into the windowpane. That’s how you add interest without making the space look smaller.

Use Sconces by the Bed

Wall-mounted globe sconces flanking both sides of headboard
The Spruce

Instead of taking up space on your nightstand with bedside lamps, install sconces above and slightly to the side of your headboard. This works to draw the eye upward, helps to give the room an open, airy look, and reduces visual clutter around your bed. Adjustable sconces are perfect for nighttime reading—just move the light right where you need it, and push it back when you’re done.

Keep Furniture in Scale

green bedroom with tall headboard, accent tables scaled ti match bed

Erin Williamson Design

A small room doesn’t have to mean tiny furniture, but it does mean that you’ll need to find pieces that match in scale and are sized appropriately for your space. A king-sized bed flanked with two tiny nightstands looks silly.

Instead, choose a bed size that allows you to fit at least one or two nightstands large enough to hold their own beside the mattress, like the bedroom shown here. Your dresser should match the nightstand in scale—often, a dresser that is tall and narrow works better than a wide, short piece in a small room.

Try a Light Palette

lighter color scheme

Michelle Boundreau Design

You’ve probably heard that white opens up a room, and that is generally true. But that doesn’t mean that your bedroom needs to resemble an operating room. You don’t need to decorate in all white, but it helps to stick with a soft, light palette. Pastels work wonderfully in small rooms, as do whispery-light shades of gray.

Try white mixed with one bright or mid-tone color, such as the blue and white shown here. For the most impact, stick with cool colors—shades of soft blue, green, and purple help enlarge a space, while the warmer hues have the opposite effect.

Stick to Thin or No Drapes

bedroom with black accent wall and open windows, city view
Alvin Wayne

Natural light is one of the best resources at your disposal to help make a room feel larger, so take advantage of it. If you can keep your windows bare and unadorned, it can make your room feel like it’s connected to the outside space, making it feel larger. If you still want some privacy, you can implement curtains—just try to stick to thinner ones and still allow light to shine through.

Try a Mostly White Color Scheme

All white bedroom with metal rail as headboard and gray and brown pilloes
The Spruce

White color schemes can work effectively to make a small space feel open and spacious. You don’t have to keep every wall a sterile shade, but you can play around with texture and shades to see what works best for you. Adding in lighter neutral accents like the wooden bed frame shown here can add a small amount of diversity without cramping the space—or the style.

Try Stylish Bunk Beds

Stylish and neutral-colored bunk beds with wooden ladder and railing
The Spruce

Smaller spaces aren’t always forgiving enough to easily fit multiple beds, making the room feel cramped. Bunk beds can be a simple way to use some of the vertical space you have available without taking up unneeded square footage. Bunk beds don’t have to be basic, though—there are plenty of stylish and modern options that will wow your kids or even guests who are staying over.

Try Floating Nightstands

Bedroom with hanging lights on both sides of bed and floating nighstands
The Spruce

While you may be familiar with floating shelves, but what about floating nightstands? Rather than tables that have bulky legs or boxy styles that take up floor space, installing the floating versions allows for plenty of extra space to be revealed. This gives the illusion of more space while still giving you a place to place a lamp or alarm clock.

Try a Different Rug Placement

bedroom with white bedding, brown bed frame, white side table, black and white rug under half of the bed

Mindy Gayer

We know rugs can play a vital part in a layout and design, and certain tricks can change up the entire feel of the whole room. Placing your rug at the foot of the bed and having only half the bed sitting on it can create an elongated effect, tricking your eye into believing there is more space and what is actually present. You can also use the trick in other parts of the room, placing only the front or the back legs of pieces of furniture on the rug for the same idea.