Coffee Tables

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Material:  Sintered Stone
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FAQs About Coffee Tables

1. What is a coffee table and what is it used for?

A coffee table is a low, flat-surfaced table placed in front of a sofa or seating area in a living room.
In practice it holds drinks, books, remote controls, and decorative items, but in most homes it pulls more weight than that. It anchors the seating arrangement visually, defines the boundaries of the conversational space, and in smaller apartments often doubles as a work surface or casual dining spot.
Modern coffee tables frequently include storage through drawers, open shelves, or lift-top compartments, making them one of the hardest-working pieces of furniture in the room.

2. How do I choose the right coffee table size?

Two measurements drive most of the decision: length and height.
For length, a reliable design rule is that your coffee table should be roughly two thirds the length of your sofa. If your sofa is around 84 inches, aim for a table between 48 and 56 inches. Leave 16 to 18 inches between the sofa edge and the table so you can reach it without leaning forward uncomfortably.
For height, the tabletop should sit level with or just slightly below your sofa seat cushions, typically 16 to 18 inches off the floor. Too tall and it feels like a desk; too low and it feels disconnected from the seating.
Our coffee table sizing guide covers every measurement in detail with room layout examples.

3. What shape coffee table works best for different living rooms?

Shape is more a functional choice than a style one. Rectangular coffee tables are the most versatile: they pair cleanly with straight sofas and L-shaped sectionals and maximize usable surface area for the floor space they take up. If you have a standard three-seat sofa against one wall, a rectangle is usually the most practical starting point.
Round and oval coffee tables work especially well with sectional seating arrangements because you can move around all sides without running into corners. They also improve traffic flow in tighter rooms and are safer in households with young children.
Square tables suit compact seating groups where a longer rectangle would feel off-balance. Nesting tables are worth considering when you need flexible surface area without a permanent footprint in a smaller space.

4. What is a lift-top coffee table and who is it good for?

A lift-top coffee table has a hinged surface that tilts up and extends outward to create a raised platform at a comfortable working or dining height. It turns a standard living room table into a laptop desk, an eating surface, or a homework station without requiring a separate piece of furniture.
Most lift-top designs also include hidden storage underneath the raised section for blankets, controllers, books, and other items you want close but out of sight. They are especially useful in studio apartments, small living rooms, and work-from-home setups where a single piece needs to do several jobs.
Povison's lift-top coffee tables ship fully assembled with the mechanism already calibrated, so you can use it from the moment it arrives. Browse the full range in Povison coffee tables with storage, with filters for type, shape, and size.

5. What is the best coffee table material for everyday use?

Solid wood is the most durable everyday option for most households. Oak, walnut, and ash handle surface wear better than particleboard, can often be refinished if scratched, and develop a natural patina over time. For homes with kids or pets, a matte or satin finish hides fingerprints and minor scuffs better than a high-gloss one.
Sintered stone is a strong alternative when you want a harder, lower-maintenance surface. Its near-zero porosity means most spills sit on top rather than soaking in, and it resists heat and scratches better than most wood finishes without needing sealing or conditioning.
Across Povison's coffee table range, the most popular builds pair an FSC-certified solid wood frame with a sintered stone top.You get the warmth of natural wood in the base and a wipe-clean stone surface for daily use. Customers consistently describe the sintered stone tops as feeling more premium in person than they expect from product photos.

6. What is the difference between a coffee table and a cocktail table?

In most contexts the two terms mean the same thing. Both describe a low table placed in front of seating in a living room or lounge.
"Cocktail table" became popular in mid-century American design, especially in more formal or hospitality settings, while "coffee table" has always been the everyday term.
Today the distinction is mostly regional and stylistic. Interior designers occasionally use "cocktail table" for a slightly larger or more formal piece, but for practical shopping purposes the words are fully interchangeable.
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