I’ve designed girls bedrooms across three countries and two decades — from a sunny yellow room in Melbourne to a fairy-lit house bed in London. What I’ve learned is that the best girls bedrooms are never all-new, never all-themed, and never finished. They tell the story of your family. The crochet throw on my daughter’s house bed in London was made by my grandmother, given to me, and passed on to her. No interiors shop can sell you that.

A girls bedroom is one of the most personal spaces in the home. It needs to be a sanctuary, a playroom, a study, a den — often all at once, and in a room that might not be all that big. And yet it’s also one of the most joyful rooms to design, if you approach it with a little thought, and resist the urge to go all-in on a single theme that your daughter will have outgrown by next birthday.
The best girls bedrooms we’ve seen share a few things in common: considered colour choices that have longevity, furniture that earns its floor space, and personal touches that make a room feel truly hers. Here, we’ve gathered our favourite girls bedroom ideas — from paint and wallpaper to beds, storage, and styling — with products sourced from some of our favourite independent and design-led retailers.
Girls Bedroom Colour and Paint Ideas
Forget the tired notion that a girls bedroom must be pink. The most beautiful, enduring girls bedrooms are built on a more considered colour palette — one that can evolve as she does. That said, done well, pink is one of the most versatile and timeless choices you can make — it just needs to be the right pink.
Here are six Farrow & Ball colours that work beautifully in a girls bedroom, from the softest blush to a bold, confident blue.
Sulking Room Pink is perhaps the most grown-up pink in the F&B palette — a deep, dusty rose with real sophistication. Here it’s used brilliantly on a panelled feature wall, which gives the colour structure and stops it feeling sweet. The white wardrobe and gold accents lift it perfectly. This is a colour that will look just as good at fifteen as it does at five.
Smoked Trout is the colour for parents who love the warmth of pink but want something that reads more as a neutral. It’s a soft, smoky taupe-pink that creates the most enveloping, cocooning atmosphere — particularly beautiful in a room with a canopy bed and layered soft furnishings. It works across every age and would sit beautifully with natural wood, rattan, and white linen.
The seagrass bed frame and canopy also make brilliant use of a smaller room — for more ideas on maximising space, see our small bedroom storage ideas guide.
Pitch Blue is for the girl who doesn’t do things by halves. Used here by the brilliant Bluebell Gray in a full colour drench — walls, woodwork, door, all in one committed, glorious shade — it creates a room with genuine personality and drama. The teal bedded, rainbow cushions and felt animal heads work precisely because the room has the confidence to carry them. Nothing is apologetic here.
The multicolour watercolour-print accent chair is exactly the kind of statement piece that elevates a room from nice to memorable — if the idea of a patterned accent chair appeals, see our guide to patterned accent chairs and how to style them.
This is a colour that grows up beautifully. What feels joyful and playful at seven will feel cool and considered at seventeen. That’s the mark of a truly great design decision.
Down Pipe on a feature wall is one of those combinations that sounds unexpected and looks completely right. Here it’s paired with Shadow White on the remaining walls and woodwork, creating depth without darkness. That mustard colour locker proves that storage doesn’t have to be an afterthought — in the right colour, against the right wall, it becomes the focal point of the room. See our full guide to Colourful metal storage cabinets, for the full Mustard Made range and how to style them.
Pink Ground is one of F&B’s softest, most wearable pinks — barely-there in bright light, beautifully warm in the evening. It’s a colour that will still feel right when she’s redecorating it herself at eighteen.
Calamine is the definitive girls bedroom pink — so soft it reads almost as a white in bright light, so warm it wraps a room in the evening. Here it’s used in a full colour drench across the walls, ceiling and every sloped attic surface, with Slipper Satin grounding the woodwork. The effect is completely cocooning.
This is also one of the best girls loft bedroom ideas we’ve seen.
Attic rooms present a real design challenge — the sloped ceilings and awkward angles can feel oppressive if you fight them. The solution, as demonstrated here beautifully, is to lean in. Colour drench the whole space in one shade, paint the floorboards, and let the architecture become the feature rather than the problem.
The vintage four-poster bed, glass-fronted pink armoire and blanket box at the foot of the bed are a lesson in mixing old and new — each piece has character and history, and none of them match in the way a showroom would match them. That’s precisely why it works. The blanket box is a lovely example of girls bedroom storage ideas done well — a beautiful antique piece that earns its floor space twice over, as both a design statement and somewhere to stash the things that don’t have a home anywhere else. For more storage ideas check out our Storage Hub.
If you have a loft bedroom to design, don’t miss our dedicated loft conversion ideas article for more inspiration.
Girls Bedroom Beds: Choosing the Right One
The bed is the room’s hero piece, so it’s worth taking time to choose well. Here’s our guide to what’s available at different ages and stages, with our favourite picks from Soren’s House.
Junior and Toddler Beds
The transition from cot to bed is a significant moment, and a proper junior bed makes it feel special rather than simply functional. Look for something well-made that will last — many junior beds can be extended or adapted as your child grows.
The Nobodinoz Pure Junior Bed in Oak (£664) is one of our favourites — beautifully minimal Scandinavian design with solid oak construction and low-to-the-ground proportions that feel reassuring for younger children. The warm natural wood tone works with almost any colour scheme and will still look wonderful in five years’ time.
For a more playful option that still feels considered, the Hoppekids Eco Luxury Junior Bed in White (£359) is excellent value. Clean lines, solid construction, and that versatile white finish that works as a fresh canvas for layering in personality through bedding and accessories.
House Beds
House beds have captured children’s imaginations — and parents’ Pinterest boards — for good reason. The frame creates a sense of enclosure and play without taking up additional floor space, and the styling possibilities are endless (fairy lights, canopies, bunting).

The Hoppekids Eco Dream House Bed (£489, available in white and a natural finish) is a beautifully designed option that hits the sweet spot between playful and timeless. The house frame is sturdy and well-proportioned, and the optional extras — textiles, drawers — make it easy to build on over time.
Mid Sleepers with Slides
Few things will make you the most popular parent in the street faster than a mid sleeper with a slide. They’re genuinely brilliant for small rooms because the raised sleeping platform frees up the floor space beneath for play, reading, or storage — and the slide is, let’s be honest, a lot more fun than a ladder.
If you want the ultimate version, the Hoppekids Eco Luxury Mid Sleeper with Slide (£749, available in 70x160cm and 90x200cm) adds more refined details and a slightly more elevated aesthetic — the kind of bed that looks as good on an interiors blog as it does in real life.
Loft Beds
For older girls — particularly those who want their own defined space to read, study, or simply retreat — a loft bed is transformative. The sleeping platform sits high, and the space beneath becomes whatever she needs it to be: a desk, a reading nook, a wardrobe area.
The Oliver Furniture Wood Mini+ Low Loft Bed in White/Oak (£1,169) is one of the most beautiful children’s beds we’ve seen. The combination of white and warm oak is perfectly judged, the proportions are elegant, and the curtain option adds a sense of personal territory beneath that children absolutely love. Oliver Furniture is a Danish brand with exceptional build quality — this is a piece that will last through childhood and beyond.
For the ultimate statement, the Oliver Furniture Wood Original Loft Bed in White/Oak (£2,059) is a serious investment piece — genuinely architectural, beautifully made, and the kind of thing that could anchor a room for a decade or more.
Statement Single Beds
Not every room needs height or storage built into the bed. Sometimes a beautifully designed single bed, dressed with wonderful textiles, is exactly right.
The Oeuf NYC Moss Twin Single Bed (£999, available in Birch or Tomato) is one of the most distinctive children’s beds currently available. The scalloped edge headboard and footboard edge is a design detail that feels joyful without being juvenile — it would look entirely at home in an adult bedroom or guest room. The Tomato colourway is bold and brilliant for a confident design choice; the Birch is a warm natural that works with everything.
Girls Bedroom Storage Ideas
Storage in a girls bedroom needs to work hard. Between books, clothes, toys, art supplies, and the ever-expanding collection of soft toys that somehow multiplies overnight, a room without good storage quickly becomes a room without any floor.

Under-Bed Storage
One of the most underused storage opportunities in any bedroom. Fabric storage bins are our preferred option — they’re soft-sided so no sharp corners for children, easy to pull in and out, and can be chosen to complement the room’s colour palette. Look for sets of matching sizes that line up neatly along the bed base.
Shelving
Open shelving is essential in a children’s bedroom — it puts books and favourite things on display, encourages reading, and gives a child genuine ownership of their space. The Hoppekids ‘Storey’ Shelving Unit (£459, 8 shelves, available in 80cm width) is a beautifully designed option with clean lines and a solid white finish. The generous proportions mean it can hold books, display pieces, and storage boxes all at once without looking cluttered.
Lockers
Mustard Made’s metal lockers have become a genuine design classic, and they work particularly well in a girls bedroom. They’re practical (a proper door means things actually get put away), they come in 12 colours so there’s always a shade that works, and they have a graphic, playful quality that makes them feel like a design choice rather than simply a storage solution.
The Shorty Locker (£139) works well as a beside table alternative or in a pair flanking a window.
The Mustard Made Skinny Locker (£289) is the full-height option — brilliant for clothes, shoes, and general bedroom detritus. Both make excellent birthday or Christmas gifts.
Girls Bedroom Wallpaper Ideas
Wallpaper is one of the most effective ways to give a girls bedroom a distinct identity — and it’s more forgiving than you might think. A single feature wall behind the bed is enough to transform a room, and can be updated relatively easily when tastes change.
For younger girls, look for botanical, animal, or illustrative patterns that have genuine charm rather than simply being ‘children’s wallpaper’. The best children’s wallpaper has enough beauty and craft that it works in adult spaces too — Hibou Home is a brand worth exploring for this reason, with patterns ranging from delicate botanical prints to bolder, more graphic designs.
For older girls and teens, consider classic patterns — stripes, small florals, geometric prints — in a palette that’s sophisticated enough to last. A dark, moody wallpaper (midnight blue botanical, deep forest green) is increasingly popular in teenage bedrooms and creates a beautifully atmospheric, cocooning space.
Little Girls Bedroom Ideas
This is the room that started it all — my daughter’s bedroom in Melbourne, designed when she was small enough to think a flower rug was the most magical thing in the world. Yellow walls, butterfly wall stickers, a patchwork quilt and a polka dot roman blind: none of it matched, all of it worked. It’s the room I think about whenever someone asks how to design for a little girl — keep it warm, keep it personal, and don’t overthink it.
Little girls bedrooms should feel magical. This is the age where a bedroom is a whole world — where the rug becomes a stage, the bed becomes a castle, and the walls are a canvas for imagination. The design brief is simpler than you might think: create warmth and wonder, and leave room for her to make it her own.
Key elements for a little girl’s bedroom:
A washable rug is non-negotiable. Children’s bedrooms are not clean environments, and a rug that can go in the washing machine is worth every penny of its price premium. Lorena Canals has built an entire brand on this insight, and their rugs are genuinely beautiful — not compromises, but proper design pieces that happen to be washable.
Layer the Avery Row Little Farm Bedding Set (£55) with the Greenhouse Gingham Bedspread (£125) and finish with the Little Farm Embroidered Cushion (£32) — florals and gingham together, exactly as it should be.
A reading corner is one of the best investments you can make in a child’s bedroom. Even in a small room, a corner with a beanbag or low chair, a small shelf of books, and a soft lamp creates a destination — a place she’ll choose to be.
Shared Girls Bedroom Ideas
Shared bedrooms are one of the great design challenges of family homes — two (or more) distinct personalities in a single space, often with competing ideas about what that space should look like.
The fundamental principle of a successful shared bedroom is that each child must have a space that feels unambiguously hers — a zone, however small, where her things live and her personality is reflected.
Bunk beds and mid sleepers are the obvious starting point for shared rooms. They maximise floor space, create defined sleeping zones, and — particularly with mid sleepers — offer each child a degree of private territory. The Hoppekids range offers a good variety of options at different price points, and the clean white finishes mean that the rest of the room can carry the personality.
Separate storage is more important than it might seem. Shared storage quickly becomes contested territory. Where possible, give each child her own chest of drawers, her own bookshelf section, or her own locker. Mustard Made’s Shorty Lockers work brilliantly for this — a pair in different colours, one for each child, creates clear visual ownership without requiring additional floor space.
A shared colour palette with individual accents is the design solution that works best. Agree on a base — white walls, natural wood furniture — and allow each child to personalise through bedding, cushions, and small accessories. This creates visual coherence while respecting individual taste.
Girls Bedroom FAQ
What colour should I paint a girls bedroom?
There are no rules, but the most enduring choices are colours with enough complexity to grow with the room — dusty pinks, warm whites, sage greens, soft blues. Avoid very saturated primaries, which can feel overpowering at scale and are quickly outgrown. Farrow & Ball’s Petal, Middleton Pink, and Mizzle are all excellent starting points.
What’s the best bed for a small girls bedroom?
A mid sleeper or loft bed is the most space-efficient option because it uses vertical rather than horizontal space. The Hoppekids mid sleepers are a great choice at the mid price point. If height isn’t possible, a bed with integrated drawers or a pull-out trundle maximises storage without additional furniture.
How do I design a girls bedroom that will last as she grows?
Invest in quality, neutral foundation pieces — good bed, good storage, considered paint colour — and treat everything else as dressing that can evolve. Avoid themed furniture (the fairy castle bed will be an embarrassment by age nine) in favour of pieces with genuine design quality that can be restyled rather than replaced.
What’s the best rug for a girls bedroom?
A washable rug is always the right answer for a child’s bedroom. Lorena Canals are the gold standard — beautiful design, genuinely machine washable, and available in a range from small accent rugs to large statement pieces.
How do I create a reading corner in a girls bedroom?
You don’t need much space. A beanbag or small armchair, a low shelf or basket of books, a lamp, and — if possible — a position near a window. The Wigiwama beanbag chairs are an excellent option: generously proportioned, beautifully upholstered, and comfortable enough to actually read in.
How should I approach a shared girls bedroom?
The key principles are: separate sleeping zones (bunk or mid sleeper beds), individual storage (each child has her own space), a shared neutral base, and individual personalisation through bedding and accessories. Avoid splitting the room down the middle visually — it tends to make both halves feel smaller.
Girls’ bedrooms are not a problem to be solved — they’re one of the most joyful rooms in the house to design. Get the bones right (a bed worth keeping, walls that can grow with her, storage that actually works) and let the personality do the rest. The details will change a dozen times before she leaves home. That’s entirely the point.
More bedroom inspiration from Artisan Haus
From gallery walls to framed prints — how to choose artwork that grows with her.
Read more → Kids’ RoomsImaginative rooms that spark creativity — for children who want something a little different.
Read more → NurseryBeautiful, calm nursery ideas that set the mood for the years of bedroom design ahead.
Read more → StorageClever, beautiful storage that keeps a home feeling calm — including children’s rooms.
Read more →All our children’s bedroom inspiration in one place, from nursery to teenage years.