How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (2024)

I always seem to be re-arranging my living room furniture. And knowing these furniture arrangement tips for successful living room layouts definitely helps get the job done. Even in a living room like mine that has a large window, a TV and a fireplace.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (1)

I like to think of furniture arranging like a puzzle.

There’s a way that all the pieces will fit together perfectly which makes the room look and feel “right”.

But if you have the pieces put in the wrong way, it just never ends up looking like you want it.

Fortunately, there are a few simple guidelines you can follow to figure out your living room layout.

Which will help the pieces fall into place without too much work.

A Note About Pinning: Some of these pictures are from houzz.com and cannot be pinned due to their copyright restrictions.

1 | Define your traffic flow

This post may contain affiliate links. We make a small commission if you buy the products from these links (at no extra cost to you). As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. But we only recommend products we would use ourselves. For more information,click here to see our disclosures.

The first thing you need to do before you start arranging furniture is to figure out where people walk when they are going through the room.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (2)

The obvious traffic flow paths are between all of the doorways in the room.

But there may be some others, if you have other areas in the room that are a “destination”.

Maybe you have a built-in bar, a wood burning fireplace that needs to be stocked, or some casem*nt windows you like to open.

Make a special note of any of the areas where furniture gets in the way of the traffic flow.

2 | Pick out your main focal point

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (3)

The second living room layout decision is to figure out what you want the main focal point of the room to be.

This could be your fireplace, the beautiful view out your window, some artwork that you love or even the TV.

If your house is like mine, you may have multiple focal points to choose from. My living room has a large window and a corner fireplace (both of which I love).

Plus there’s a TV. To be totally honest, there are 2 TV’s. (One of them is leftover from my Super Bowl party and may or may not make its way out of the living room at some point.)

In any case, I don’t really want the TV to be the center of attention, but I do want to be able to watch it comfortably.

So what do I use as my focal point?

I actually have a different one for different seasons.

During the summer, my focal point is the view out the window.

During the winter, it is the fireplace.

So that’s totally an option if you don’t mind moving furniture around 🙂

But you do need to have only one focal point at a time.

You’ll want to arrange your furniture so that the focal point can be seen clearly from your seating arrangement.

3 | Draw a living room layout diagram

Okay, you can skip the living room design diagram if you want to.

But I find it’s really helpful to draw out my floor space and how I think the furniture should be arranged before I start moving stuff around.

Ideally, this floor plan is drawn to scale on a piece of graph paper or using a room design app (ie. you measure the length of all your walls and your furniture, and then draw them the right size in the right place so that you know everything fits).

I don’t always do the “to-scale” part. But, even a rough draft helps so you have an idea of what furniture layout you want to try.

4 | Position large furniture first

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (4)

If you have any furniture that only fits in one or two places in your room, put that furniture in first.

For small living rooms, there may be only one way that your large couch will fit in your room.

Or if you have an open concept living room, there may be only one wall that is big enough to fit your large armoire (or other large piece of furniture).

5 | Figure Out Where The TV Is Going

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (5)

If you are going to have a TV in your living room, figuring out where it will go is your next furniture placement decision.

You will likely want it to be somewhere in the vicinity of your focal point so that you’ll be able to see both from your seating arrangement.

For best viewing, you don’t want it to be directly across from a window that will cause a lot of reflection on the TV.

And you also don’t want it to be so high up on the wall that it’s uncomfortable to watch. That’s kind of like being in the first row at the movie theater 🙂

Living room arrangements with a fireplace and TV

Since I have a living room with a large window, a fireplace and a TV, I know it can be a bit challenging to come up with a furniture arrangement that works in this scenario. So I thought a few examples might help.

1. TV above the fireplace

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (6)

Hanging the television set above the fireplace is the easiest way to have a living room layout with a TV that keeps the fireplace as the focal point.

You do need to make sure that the TV is not too high to watch comfortably. The higher it is, the further back your seating will need to be.

It also limits your fireplace decorating options if that’s something you like to do.

2. TV on the wall next to the fireplace

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (7)

Putting the TV on the same wall as the fireplace is another option.

This gives you more flexibility on how the TV is housed. It can be wall mounted, put on a TV stand or stored in a larger piece of furniture like a wall unit.

Creating a seating arrangement that can see the fireplace and the TV is also fairly easy with this layout.

And you have more control over the height of the TV so it may be a more functional living room arrangement.

Note: The fireplace doesn’t have to be in the corner like this diagram. This just happens to be how my living room is laid out.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (8)

If you have an open concept room with the fireplace in the middle, you could choose to use it as the divider between the TV watching area and the dining area.

3. TV on the wall opposite to the fireplace

Placing the TV on the opposite wall to the fireplace is one way to make sure the TV is not going to detract from the way it looks.

In order for this to work, you need to set up your furniture so you can see both the TV and the fireplace.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (9)

For small spaces, this means having the sofas (or loveseats) run perpendicular to the fireplace and TV walls.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (10)

For a larger room, you could have back to back sofas where you sit in one to watch TV and the other to see the fireplace.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (11)

Or if you really have a lot of space, go over the top and have back to back chaise lounges 🙂

4. TV at a right angle to the fireplace

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (12)

In this furniture arrangement, the TV and the fireplace are at right angles to each other.

Then there is seating arranged to face both them – two sofas in this case.

However, you could replace one (or both of the sofas) with two armchairs to accomplish the same thing.

This room is quite big with large sofas. But the same idea would work in a smaller room using smaller furniture, like a loveseat instead of the couch or accent chairs instead of armchairs.

If you find a spot that you think would be good for viewing but don’t like the idea of seeing the TV there all the time, you can always use one of these ways to hide the TV.

You can find some ideas on how to layout an L-shaped living room dining room combination HERE.

6 | Create a conversation area

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (13)

The next step of designing your living room layout is to create conversation areas.

These are groupings of furniture where people can sit and talk.

You will want your main seating area to be oriented around your focal point. And be able to see the TV (if you have one in the room).

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (14)

The easiest way to do this is to have your sofa facing directly at your focal point.

And then create a U-shaped layout around it.

To make your conversation area feel comfortable, try to group your furniture so people are sitting at a 90 degree angle from each other or across from each other, rather than right beside each other.

Most people do not feel totally comfortable talking to someone sitting directly beside them. Think about an auditorium with a bunch of empty seats, most people will pick a seat that has one or two empty seats around it.

Also, furniture in a conversation area should not be placed more than 8 feet apart.

And everyone should have easy access to a coffee table or side tables where they can put down a drink.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (15)

If you have a big room (or a long thin room), you may need to break the room up into multiple conversation areas, rather than making one big one.

Benches are a versatile way to split up a long room, since they don’t take up a lot of space and you can sit on them from either side.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (16)

For small rooms, you may want to consider not using a sofa at all.

A grouping of 4 chairs around a table can make a really cozy conversation area that doesn’t take up much room.

7 | Create Straight Path Traffic Flows

Now you’re going to look at the living room furniture arrangement you’ve created and make sure the traffic flow works. Remember those traffic paths you defined above?

You need to make sure that when people are walking through the room along those traffic flow paths, it doesn’t feel like an obstacle course. You know where your guests have to jump over a table, walk around a sofa and trip over the edge of a rug to get to the other side.

For doors on one side of the room

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (17)

If you are lucky and the doors to your room are all on one side of the room, you may be able to solve this easily by pulling the furniture away from the wall.

Having a couple of chairs or a sofa that floats in the room also makes the living room feel more interesting.

That creates a walkway behind your seating arrangement that gives people a straight path to their destination.

The pathway should be about 3 feet wide to create a comfortable walkway.

Don’t worry, there aren’t “walk a straight path police” 🙂 If you have the space and want to add something like a console table against the wall to add some interest, that’s totally fine.

For doors on opposite sides of the room

If the doors to your room are on opposite corners, then you have a couple of seating options:

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (18)

a. Place the furniture in the center of your room so people can walk around the edges of the room to get to where they want to go.This arrangement works well for rooms that are quite large or have patio doors on one side.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (19)

b. Arrange your furniture in smaller groupings or zones so that people can walk through the middle of the room without running into obstacles. This arrangement is often necessary in smaller rooms that aren’t big enough to pull all the furniture away from the walls.

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (20)

You do want to avoid having the walkways go right through the middle of a conversation area if at all possible.

People can sense that it’s a walkway even if no-one is currently walking there and it creates a divide that can make your conversation area feel uncomfortable.

8 | Add Tables, area Rugs, Lamps and other accents

Finally, you want to add in your tables, area rugs, table lamps and other accessories to your living room furniture arrangement.

A few hints:

  • All seats should have a end table close by to put down a drink.
  • Coffee tables should be about 14″ to 18″ away from the edge of the sofa (or chairs).
  • If tables are close to a walkway, consider using round ones instead of square ones. They are less likely to get banged into.
  • Area rugs are great for defining conversation areas. Place at least the front legs of all of the furniture in the grouping on the rug and it immediately ties them all together.
  • For small spaces, ottomans are great multi-functional pieces of furniture, especially if they contain storage. They can double as a coffee table and extra seating depending on how you place them.

Find more tips for decorating your living room HERE.

Hopefully you’ve found some inspiration from these living room layouts that will help make your living room furniture arrangement the best it can be.

Other living room Ideas You Might Like

  • L-shaped living room layouts
  • 10 common living room layout mistakes (and how to fix them)
  • Living room wall decor ideas
  • Living room focal point ideas
  • Small living room decor ideas

Pin It So You Don't Forget It!

How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (21)

Have comments or questions on our living room layouts and furniture arrangement tips? Tell us in the section below.

This post was originally published on February 12, 2019 but was updated with new content on February 29, 2024.


How To Arrange Living Room Furniture With a TV and Fireplace (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lakeisha Bayer VM

Last Updated:

Views: 6092

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (49 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lakeisha Bayer VM

Birthday: 1997-10-17

Address: Suite 835 34136 Adrian Mountains, Floydton, UT 81036

Phone: +3571527672278

Job: Manufacturing Agent

Hobby: Skimboarding, Photography, Roller skating, Knife making, Paintball, Embroidery, Gunsmithing

Introduction: My name is Lakeisha Bayer VM, I am a brainy, kind, enchanting, healthy, lovely, clean, witty person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.