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Wooden Dining Tables

A wooden dining table has proper weight to it. Not just physical weight, though there's plenty of that when you're manoeuvring one through a doorway. It's more about the sense of permanence it gives a room. Glass looks smart but feels temporary. Metal can seem cold. Wood just sits there, solid and dependable, doing what it's done in homes for centuries.

The right wooden table sticks around. Your kids do their homework on it. You host Christmas dinner on it. Someone inevitably spills red wine on it at some point. And years later, when you run your hand across the surface, you can see all those years in the grain and the small marks that have accumulated. That's not damage that's your family's story written in oak or mango or whatever timber you've chosen.

 

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What You're Actually Buying

Walk into a furniture shop and they'll show you plenty of "wooden" tables that are mostly chipboard with a thin veneer stuck on top. Fine for some purposes, but you can't sand them down when they get scratched. You can't refinish them when the style changes. Hit them hard enough and you'll see that brown composite material underneath.

Solid wood is different. It's cut from actual timber, joined properly, and built to be repaired rather than replaced. The tables in our collection use mango, acacia, sheesham, and reclaimed timber all proper hardwoods that can take a beating.

Mango wood has become popular for good reason. It's affordable because mango trees get replaced regularly on plantations once they stop producing fruit. The wood itself is dense with lovely golden colours and interesting grain. You get something that looks expensive without the expensive bit.

Acacia is tougher. It's the wood that garden furniture gets made from because it handles weather and moisture without falling apart. For a dining table, that means spilled drinks and hot mugs won't ruin your day. The honey tones warm up nicely over time too.
Sheesham sometimes called rosewood is darker and heavier. It's the sort of wood that colonial furniture was made from, which tells you something about its durability. If you've got a busy household, sheesham shrugs off the chaos.

Reclaimed wood is its own category. This is timber salvaged from old buildings, railway sleepers, or industrial structures. It's already been through decades of life, which means it's stable and won't warp like fresh wood sometimes does. The nail holes, colour variations, and weathered character mean every table is genuinely unique. Plus you're stopping perfectly good timber from ending up in a skip.

Getting the Fit Right

Wooden tables take up visual space as well as actual floor space. A large dark table can dominate a small room in ways that a glass one wouldn't. Measure properly and when we say properly, we mean grab a tape measure and mark out the table size on your floor with masking tape. Then add 90cm all around for chairs. Walk around it. Does it feel comfortable or cramped?

Round tables work better than you'd think, especially if people need to move around the table rather than just sitting at it. No sharp corners to catch your hip on. Rectangular tables are more traditional and fit more people when you need them to.

Think about your chairs too. Standard table height is about 75cm, but check yours. You need enough leg room under the table, and your arms shouldn't be reaching up or hunching down to eat

Actually Living With It

Wood moves. Not much, but it does expand when it's humid and contract when your heating's on full blast. A well-made table accounts for this in how it's built. You'll sometimes notice tiny gaps between planks in winter that close up in summer. This is completely normal. Fighting it is pointless just accept that wood is a natural material doing natural things.

Looking after a wooden table isn't complicated. Wipe up spills. Use a coaster. Don't stick a hot pan straight from the oven onto it. Every few months, give it a wipe with some wood oil or wax your table will tell you when it needs it because water stops beading on the surface.

The dining table will get marked. This bothers some people more than others. If you're the type who'll lie awake thinking about that scratch from when someone dragged a serving dish across it, maybe get a table with a rustic or distressed finish where new marks just add to what's already there. Or accept that a table is for using, and a few marks are proof you're actually using it.

What Works Where

Natural finishes let you see what the wood actually looks like. These suit modern homes where you want clean lines and organic textures. The wood becomes a feature rather than just furniture.

Darker stains feel more formal. They're better at hiding marks, but they can make a room feel smaller and darker. You need decent lighting to stop them looking heavy.

Some tables mix painted bases with wooden tops, or combine different timber types. These bridge that gap between modern and traditional useful if your home's décor is a bit of both.

Choosing Yours

Start by deciding which wood appeals to you and fits your budget. Our collection lets you filter by material, size, and style. Read the details properly. The wood type, the finish, the dimensions, how much the thing weighs it all matters when you're living with it for the next twenty years.

Don't forget about delivery. Solid wood tables are heavy. Really heavy. Make sure your floors can take it, and that you've got a route from your front door to where it's going. Some arrive assembled, some need the legs attaching. Check before you buy so you know what you're in for.

A decent wooden dining table costs proper money, but it's one of those purchases you make once and then forget about. Choose something you like, that fits your space, and that can handle how your household actually lives. That's all there is to it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Find answers to common questions about Wooden Dining Tables

Check the product specifications—genuine solid wood will be explicitly stated. Look at edges and underside in product photos. Solid wood shows continuous grain, whilst veneer reveals different material at edges. Weight is another indicator—solid wood tables are substantially heavier.

Quality wooden tables are built to handle natural wood movement. Proper construction with expansion joints and balanced finishing prevents most issues. Maintain consistent humidity levels in your home and follow care instructions to minimise any movement. Minor seasonal changes are normal.

Acacia and mango offer excellent durability for active households. Their hardness resists denting from dropped items. Consider a distressed or rustic finish where new marks blend with existing character. Darker stains also hide daily wear better than light natural finishes.

Most wooden tables benefit from treatment every 3-6 months, depending on use and climate. If water no longer beads on the surface, it's time to reapply. Use products recommended by the manufacturer—different woods and finishes require specific care products.

Never place hot items directly on wood. The heat causes permanent marks and can crack protective finishes. Always use trivets, hot pads, or placemats under serving dishes. This simple precaution prevents damage that's difficult or impossible to repair.

Properly processed reclaimed wood makes excellent furniture. Reputable manufacturers kiln-dry the timber, remove old fasteners, and check for structural integrity. The seasoning that comes with age actually makes reclaimed wood more stable than fresh timber. Each piece meets current safety standards.

Solid wood tables typically support 50-100kg distributed across the surface. Check specific weight capacities in product details. Avoid concentrated weight in one area—distribute serving dishes evenly. The table's construction method and wood type affect capacity more than size alone.

Minor scratches often buff out with fine steel wool and wood oil, rubbing in the direction of the grain. For deeper marks, lightly sand with fine-grit paper, then refinish that area. Many scratches become less noticeable over time as the finish patinas naturally around them.

Wooden dining tables
  • How do I know if a table is solid wood or veneer?

    Check the product specifications—genuine solid wood will be explicitly stated. Look at edges and underside in product photos. Solid wood shows continuous grain, whilst veneer reveals different material at edges. Weight is another indicator—solid wood tables are substantially heavier.

  • Will my wooden table warp or crack?

    Quality wooden tables are built to handle natural wood movement. Proper construction with expansion joints and balanced finishing prevents most issues. Maintain consistent humidity levels in your home and follow care instructions to minimise any movement. Minor seasonal changes are normal.

  • What's the best wood type for families with children?

    Acacia and mango offer excellent durability for active households. Their hardness resists denting from dropped items. Consider a distressed or rustic finish where new marks blend with existing character. Darker stains also hide daily wear better than light natural finishes.

  • How often should I oil or wax my wooden table?

    Most wooden tables benefit from treatment every 3-6 months, depending on use and climate. If water no longer beads on the surface, it's time to reapply. Use products recommended by the manufacturer—different woods and finishes require specific care products.

  • Can wooden tables handle hot plates and dishes?

    Never place hot items directly on wood. The heat causes permanent marks and can crack protective finishes. Always use trivets, hot pads, or placemats under serving dishes. This simple precaution prevents damage that's difficult or impossible to repair.

  • Are reclaimed wood tables safe and stable?

    Properly processed reclaimed wood makes excellent furniture. Reputable manufacturers kiln-dry the timber, remove old fasteners, and check for structural integrity. The seasoning that comes with age actually makes reclaimed wood more stable than fresh timber. Each piece meets current safety standards.

  • What weight can a wooden dining table support?

    Solid wood tables typically support 50-100kg distributed across the surface. Check specific weight capacities in product details. Avoid concentrated weight in one area—distribute serving dishes evenly. The table's construction method and wood type affect capacity more than size alone.

  • How do I remove scratches from my wooden table?

    Minor scratches often buff out with fine steel wool and wood oil, rubbing in the direction of the grain. For deeper marks, lightly sand with fine-grit paper, then refinish that area. Many scratches become less noticeable over time as the finish patinas naturally around them.