A corner desk makes sense when you have a corner available and want more desk surface without pushing the desk further into the room. The trade-off is a larger footprint in the corner itself, which only works if the room layout allows it. For corner-specific setup ideas including lighting and visual separation, see the corner home office ideas guide.
Before choosing a corner desk, confirm you have at least 100 cm of clear wall on each side of the corner and enough clearance behind the chair — typically 90 cm minimum.
Corner desk types for small spaces
| Type | Best for | Typical footprint | Main drawback |
|---|---|---|---|
| L-shaped desk (two rectangular sections) | Dual monitors, multitasking setups | 120 × 120 cm to 160 × 160 cm | Larger footprint; corner joint can waste space |
| Triangular corner desk | Very tight corners, minimal surface needed | 80 × 80 cm | Smaller surface area; no long straight run |
| Corner desk with hutch | Storage-heavy setups, shelving above work surface | 120 × 120 cm + height | Tall profile makes room feel smaller |
| Reversible L-desk | Flexibility — can reconfigure left or right return | Varies by model | Often lower build quality at budget price points |
| Wall-mounted corner shelf desk | Studio apartments, very small rooms | Minimal — no legs | Limited weight capacity; no under-desk storage |
Sizing a corner desk for a small room
The key measurement is not the desk itself but the room clearance after it is placed.
For rooms between 9 and 14 square metres, an L-desk with 110–120 cm legs on each side usually works without dominating the floor plan. Below 9 sqm, a triangular corner desk or a standard straight desk is typically a better fit — the L-shape will feel cramped once the chair is added.
The wasted corner problem
Standard L-shaped desks have a junction at the corner that is often difficult to use — the monitor placement at the corner angle puts the screen too close, and the angled surface is awkward for anything else.
Practical fixes:
- Use the corner zone for storage: A small desktop organiser, a plant, or a second monitor arm placed at the corner
- Corner monitor arm: A dual-arm that spans the corner puts both monitors on the straight sections, leaving the corner clear
- Corner shelf: A low shelf at the junction raises items to a usable height and defines the space as storage rather than wasted surface
Cable management in a corner setup
Corner desks create two cable routing challenges: the junction between the two desk sections, and two separate desk legs rather than one central run.
Route cables in two stages:
- Bundle cables on each desk section separately, routing along the back edge toward the corner
- At the corner joint, combine both bundles into one route down the back leg or directly to the wall
A cable spine along the back edge (adhesive cable channels or a desk-mounted cable raceway) keeps the dual routing clean. A power strip mounted under the corner section eliminates cables running to the floor from the centre of the desk.
What to look for before buying
The specs that matter most for a small corner desk. Once you have selected your desk, the home office desk setup guide covers monitor placement, arms, and tech configuration that applies to corner desks specifically:
- Leg material: Steel legs are more stable than plastic; look for cross-bracing if the desk is over 120 cm on either leg
- Surface thickness: 25 mm or thicker for meaningful rigidity; thinner surfaces bow under monitor weight
- Assembly joinery: The joint between the two L sections should be metal, not plastic clips
- Monitor arm compatibility: Desk should have a flat, even surface edge at least 5 cm deep for a monitor arm clamp; avoid desks with bevelled or angled front edges
Frequently asked questions
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It depends on the room shape. A corner desk uses dead corner space, which can free up more walkable floor area than a straight desk against one wall. But it only works if the room has a usable corner — at least 100 cm of clear wall on each side — and enough chair clearance behind the desk.
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An L-desk with 110–120 cm legs on each side fits most small bedrooms with a proper corner. In very small rooms under 10 sqm, a triangular corner desk (roughly 80 × 80 cm footprint) or a standard straight desk is usually a better fit.
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Straight desk if you have one good wall and don't need a large surface area. L-shaped if you have a usable corner, need dual monitors or more surface space, and the room layout allows the larger footprint. Measure both options marked on the floor before deciding.
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Route cables along the back edge of each desk section toward the corner, bundle them there, and run one combined bundle down the back leg or along the wall to the power strip. Mount the power strip under the corner section to keep floor cables minimal. A cable raceway along the back edge keeps the routing hidden.