Outdoor Furniture

This Outdoor Furniture category page pulls together patio and garden pieces such as dining sets, lounge seating, benches and storage, shown as separate items or as matched collections from multiple partner retailers. We have noticed that some ranges appear as single listings with selectable seat count, frame colour and cushion shade, while others split each table, chair and cushion set into its own tile. It’s a practical mix. You’ll also notice that availability shifts as partners update their ranges, so a 6-seater set in a charcoal finish can drop out while the same frame returns in a natural tone or with a different tabletop material.

Read on for how outdoor furniture listings vary by type, size, build and retailer formatting

Core furniture types you’ll run into

Dining tables, lounge seating and occasional pieces dominate, with parasol bases and deck boxes appearing alongside them. Some partners publish garden dining sets as one grouped listing with options for 4-seater vs 6-seater, while others split the chairs and table into separate tiles and show cushion boxes as add-ons. Scale matters. Look for table lengths around 120–180cm, chair counts, and whether the set includes a parasol hole or a lazy Susan insert. Dunelm listings also mix in bistro sets and compact balcony tables, so seat width and folded size can be the deciding detail.

Sets, bundles, and how variants are handled

Outdoor ranges arrive as full sets, modular bundles, or single replacements like one chair or one cushion pack. With patio furniture sets, one partner might show “4-piece” as sofa + 2 chairs + coffee table, while another uses “5-piece” for the same layout by counting seat cushions separately. It’s not consistent. Watch for whether cushions are included, the table type (slatted coffee table vs glass-top), and pack format such as 2-packs of chairs. The Range sometimes publishes the same frame in two finishes—black powder-coated vs grey—under separate listings rather than a selectable option.

Sizing, seat counts, and layout constraints

Outdoor furniture sizing is published unevenly: some listings give full footprints, others only seat count and a rough description like “compact”. For an outdoor corner sofa, check the stated left-hand vs right-hand orientation, overall footprint (for example 220 x 220cm), and seat height around 40–45cm, because similar photos can hide very different proportions. Small details bite. Table height (about 72–75cm for dining) and chair stackability also change what fits in a shed or under a cover. When dimensions are missing, cushion thickness (8–12cm vs slimmer pads) is sometimes the only clue to bulk.

Materials, frames, and functional build details

Materials drive both look and maintenance: aluminium frames with powder-coated paint behave differently to steel frames, and PE weave differs from natural cane. With rattan garden furniture, check whether the weave is round or flat, whether the frame is welded aluminium, and if the tabletop is tempered glass or polywood slats—each affects weight and how it handles rain. Some details are easy to miss. Cushion covers may be removable with zip closures, while other sets use fixed covers that need spot cleaning; that changes upkeep over a season. Barker and Stonehouse listings sometimes specify UV resistance and shower-resistant cushions, but the same style elsewhere may omit those build notes.

The checks people make before choosing between similar listings

Seat comfort comes first: look for seat depth, back height, and whether cushions are box-edged or piped. Next, check storage and protection details such as a weatherproof cover included, a stackable chair design, or a bench with under-seat storage. Photos aren’t enough. With wooden garden benches, confirm the timber type (acacia vs eucalyptus), the finish (oiled vs painted), and the stated weight limit if it’s provided, because “2-seater” can mean anything from 110cm to 140cm wide. Finally, note whether fixings are included and if the listing is flat-pack or pre-assembled.

How discount codes can reduce the cost of Outdoor Furniture shopping on Discount Promo Codes

Discount codes relate to reduced cost when buying outdoor pieces where listings specify tangible details like frame material, seat count and cushion thickness, including metal garden chairs sold as single items or 2-packs. The mechanics sit alongside the product browsing. Discount Promo Codes provides access to discount codes for partner retailers, and retailer code-page links may appear next to product listings rather than inside the product description itself—formatting varies by merchant. Not every retailer shows code availability at the same time. Separately, the platform’s operation supports a monthly charity donation, with 20% of profits donated; it’s a fixed policy rather than a product feature. Made.com may appear as one of the partner options, depending on current listing turnover.