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Soho Home: 25 Pieces We’re Buying In 2025

Soho Home has long been the go-to for that covetable, lived-in-luxe vibe that Soho House members enjoy behind closed doors. Think: velvet armchairs, marble top dining tables, and hand-blown glassware that turns your own home into a private members’ club (with better snacks).

Born in 2016 to much fanfare, Soho Home is the interiors offshoot of the global Soho House empire – and the brand has since become a byword for cool, curated living. Drawing inspiration from more than 40 Houses worldwide – from Hong Kong to New York, White City to Soho House Rome – each piece feels like a love letter to elevated interior design.

What started with a humble collection of glassware has bloomed into an expansive catalogue of investment pieces. We’re talking buttery boucle footstools, solid oak side tables, antique rose square cushions, and chandeliers that wouldn’t look out of place in a Parisian loft. Whether you’re outfitting your living room or hunting down the perfect bedside table, there’s a reason this is one of the best Soho Home edits out there.

If you’re as obsessed with your living space as we are, Soho Home offers more than just beautiful homeware. The latest new-in pieces have us completely hooked. There’s the Abel armchair, upholstered in olive green velvet and linen – a lesson in how to do relaxed luxury. Then there’s the Theodore daybed, with its sleek silhouette and deep tufted seat that basically begs for a Sunday nap. And don’t sleep on the Hawksworth table lamp, either – a sculptural stone base and soft textured shade give it that vintage-meets-modern charm we can’t get enough of.

Whether you’re lusting over a sleek patio set to elevate your garden game, or saving up for that full-price velvet headboard, Soho Home ticks every aesthetic box – and then some. The vibe is grown-up but not overly serious, modern but never sterile. We’ve pulled together a roundup of our must-have Soho Home pieces to buy online now. Because, really, who doesn’t want their flat to feel like a Soho House suite?

SKIP TO: What to buy, as chosen by a GLAMOUR interiors journalist | What is Soho Home furniture? | What is Soho Home plus? | Do Soho House members get discount on Soho Home? |


What is Soho Home furniture?

Soho Home furniture is based on the idea that Soho House admirers, be it members or non members, can ‘Bring the House home.’ It allows customers to pick styles from their favourite Houses across the globe, from New York to Sydney, and bring them into the heart of their very own living spaces. The pieces are made with high quality materials, including leather, oak and velvet and, much like a high-traffic members club, they’re designed to last through frequent use.

What is Soho Home plus?

SOHO HOME+ is a £100-per-year membership that offers its patrons 15% off full price products (which, for a large portion of the site’s products, would work out at well over the £100 fee), free UK delivery for most items, early access to sales and, for sale items, an extra 20% off. Additionally, exclusive membership grants access to Houses worldwide, offering preferential rates on dining and spa services for members to indulge in.

Do Soho House members get discount on Soho Home?

Yes, Soho House members get 15% off at Soho Home.

After more interiors content? Check out our pick of the best desks for small bedrooms, the best coffee tables to elevate your living room, and the best bed frames for your bedroom.

More interiors content

For more from GLAMOUR UK’s Commerce Writer Mayola Fernandes, follow her on Instagram @mayolafernandess.

Keep scrolling for our pick of the best Soho Home pieces to add to your interiors repertoire…

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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