You bought a beautiful buffet for your dining room, and now it’s sitting there looking… awkward. Maybe you’ve placed a few random items on top and it still feels bare, or worse, you’ve piled things on and it looks cluttered. A buffet offers valuable storage and surface space, but styling it properly transforms it from a catch-all sideboard into a focal point that ties your whole dining room together.

Start With Functional Pieces as Your Foundation
The best buffet styling balances beauty with practicality. Begin with items you actually use in your dining room—this gives your arrangement purpose and prevents it from looking like a staged display that nobody touches.
Consider keeping a tray with glasses and a water pitcher for easy access during meals, or display your favorite serving bowls and platters that you reach for regularly. A wine rack or bar accessories make sense if you entertain often. These functional pieces become your anchors—typically the larger items that you’ll build around.
Place your tallest or most substantial functional item off-center rather than dead in the middle. This asymmetrical approach feels more collected and intentional than a perfectly centered arrangement. If you’re storing spirits or barware, a small tray corrals everything and makes the setup feel purposeful rather than random.
Layer in Decor Using the Triangle Rule
Professional designers often use the “rule of three” or triangle principle when styling surfaces. This means creating visual triangles with objects of varying heights—it guides your eye naturally across the display and creates depth.
Here’s how it works: If you have a tall lamp or vase on one side (your high point), place a medium-height object like a stack of books or a decorative box toward the center, then finish with something low like a small plant or bowl on the opposite end. Your eye connects these three heights in a triangle, which feels balanced even though it’s not symmetrical.
Artwork is your secret weapon for adding height without taking up valuable surface space. A large mirror or piece of art leaning against the wall behind your buffet instantly makes the whole arrangement feel more substantial. Mirrors are particularly effective because they reflect light and make your dining room feel larger. Expect to spend anywhere from $80 for a simple framed mirror to $400+ for something with an interesting frame or antique-style detailing.
Choose a Cohesive Color Story
The difference between “styled” and “messy” often comes down to color cohesion. You don’t need to match everything perfectly, but limiting yourself to three main colors creates harmony.
Look at your dining room’s existing palette—your wall color, table, and chairs—and pull those tones into your buffet styling. If your dining room features warm wood tones and cream walls, you might style with white ceramics, natural wood accessories, and touches of green from plants. If your space is more modern with cool grays, stick with metallics, black accents, and perhaps one pop of color.
Texture matters as much as color. Mix materials to add interest: a wooden bowl next to a ceramic vase next to a metal tray. This variety keeps the eye engaged while the unified color palette keeps everything feeling connected. Budget-friendly options like books, greenery, and thrifted accessories (typically $15-40 per item) can fill out your display without overspending.
Know When to Edit
The most common buffet styling mistake is overcrowding. If every inch of your buffet is covered, it doesn’t look abundant—it looks chaotic. Your buffet surface should have visible empty space, usually about 30-40% of the total area.
Step back and take a photo of your styled buffet with your phone. Photos reveal what your eye might miss when you’re standing close. If it looks too busy in the photo, remove one or two items. The goal is “curated,” not “yard sale.”
Also consider the seasons. You don’t need to redecorate completely, but swapping out one or two seasonal elements—a vase of branches in fall, fresh flowers in spring—keeps your dining room feeling current without requiring a full restyle every few months.
Styling your buffet well takes a bit of trial and error, but once you’ve found an arrangement that works, you’ll have a dining room that feels polished and complete. Trust your instincts, start with what you actually use, and don’t be afraid to move things around until the balance feels right. Your buffet should make your life easier and your dining room prettier—and with these guidelines, it will do both.