Average Cost of Bespoke Fitted Wardrobes
If you have ever priced up wardrobes for an awkward alcove, a loft room or a wall that never seems quite square, you will already know that the average cost of bespoke fitted wardrobes is not as simple as a single figure. A made-to-measure wardrobe is priced around your room, your storage needs and the level of finish you want, so the sensible question is not just what it costs, but what is included for that cost.
For most UK homes, bespoke fitted wardrobes typically start from around £2,000 to £3,500 for a straightforward smaller installation and can rise to £4,000 to £7,000 or more for larger runs, premium finishes and more complex interiors. Once you move into full wall-to-wall or floor-to-ceiling designs with internal drawers, mirrored or glass doors, lighting and installation, costs can climb beyond that. The broad range is normal because true bespoke furniture is built around the room rather than forced into it.
What affects the average cost of bespoke fitted wardrobes?
The biggest factor is size. A fitted wardrobe across a single two-metre wall will cost far less than a full bedroom scheme running wall to wall and up to the ceiling. Height matters as much as width because every extra section adds materials, internal storage and labour.
Door style also has a direct effect on price. Sliding wardrobes are often the right choice where floor space is tight because they do not need clearance to open, but the door frames, track systems and glazing options can change the cost considerably. Hinged wardrobes can be more cost-effective in some layouts, although the final figure still depends on the finish and internal specification.
Materials and finishes make a noticeable difference too. A simple, clean wood-effect board in a neutral tone will usually sit at a more accessible price point than painted finishes, shaker-style fronts, tinted mirror panels or mixed material designs. If you want the wardrobe to become a design feature rather than just storage, the budget generally needs to follow.
Then there is the interior. This is often where homeowners either save sensibly or overspend on things they do not really need. Hanging rails and open shelving keep costs lower. Add soft-close drawers, pull-out trouser racks, shoe storage, integrated dressing tables or internal lighting and the price rises quickly. None of those extras are wrong, but they should earn their place.
Typical price ranges for bespoke fitted wardrobes
A small fitted wardrobe for an alcove or compact bedroom will often fall between £2,000 and £3,500. That usually covers a made-to-measure carcass, standard internal shelving and rails, and a relatively straightforward finish.
A mid-range installation for a standard double bedroom often sits between £3,500 and £5,500. This is where many homeowners land because it allows room for better door finishes, a more tailored internal layout and a cleaner fitted look from floor to ceiling.
For larger bedrooms, awkward loft spaces or wall-to-wall designs with premium internals, you may be looking at £5,500 to £8,000 plus. If the project includes multiple fitted pieces, such as bedside units, overbed storage or matching bedroom furniture, the total will rise again.
These figures are useful for budgeting, but they are still guide prices. The average cost of bespoke fitted wardrobes in one home can be very different from another, even when the rooms seem similar on paper.
Why awkward rooms usually cost more
Fitted wardrobes come into their own in difficult spaces. Sloping ceilings, chimney breasts, alcoves and uneven walls are exactly where bespoke furniture outperforms freestanding options. They are also the spaces where joinery becomes more involved.
A wardrobe fitted under eaves, for example, needs more design work and more precise manufacturing than a simple straight run in a square room. Angled cuts, reduced-depth sections, careful door planning and zero-gap fitting all add complexity. The result is far better use of space, but the time and skill behind it will be reflected in the price.
That is often where homeowners see the value most clearly. A cheaper off-the-shelf solution may leave dead space, visible gaps and a finish that never quite feels intentional. Bespoke furniture costs more upfront, but it solves the room properly.
What should be included in the quote?
When comparing prices, do not just look at the headline number. One quote may appear cheaper because it leaves out elements another company includes as standard.
A proper fitted wardrobe quote should usually cover survey, design, materials, manufacture and fitting. It should also make clear what internal storage is included, whether soft-close hardware is standard, what finish you are getting and whether any preparation work is needed.
You should also ask about aftercare, warranty and lead times. A wardrobe is a long-term investment, so the service around the product matters. If a company designs, manufactures and installs its own furniture, there is often better continuity from first consultation through to final fit.
Is bespoke always more expensive than fitted furniture chains?
Not necessarily in the way people assume. Bespoke made-to-measure wardrobes are usually more expensive than buying a flat-pack wardrobe from a high street retailer, but that is not a like-for-like comparison. One is standard furniture made to fit as many homes as possible. The other is built around your exact room and storage requirements.
Compared with some national fitted furniture brands, truly bespoke wardrobes can be surprisingly competitive, especially when you consider design flexibility, local manufacturing and the quality of the fit. You are also less likely to pay for features you do not want if the design is built around your priorities from the start.
The smarter way to judge value is to look at cost per usable inch of storage, durability over time and how well the furniture improves the room. A wardrobe that uses every centimetre well can offer better value than a cheaper option that wastes space.
How to keep costs under control without compromising the result
The best starting point is to be clear about how you live, not just how you want the room to look. If you mostly need hanging space for workwear and long garments, build around that. If folded clothes, shoes or bags are the bigger issue, spend more on the interior where it will actually help day to day.
It also helps to prioritise visible upgrades. Door finish, handles and overall layout affect the look of the room immediately. Some internal accessories are useful, but others can be added later or simplified without losing the fitted feel.
Another practical way to manage cost is to avoid overcomplicating the design. Mirrored panels, internal lighting and specialised storage all have their place, but a clean, well-planned wardrobe with quality basics often gives the best balance of price and performance.
A design consultation is usually where savings are found. Good advice can stop you paying for unnecessary extras and help you invest in the details that will make the biggest difference.

Should you choose sliding or hinged doors?
This comes down to room layout as much as budget. Sliding doors are ideal in tighter bedrooms because they save floor space and can create a sleek, contemporary finish. They can, however, cost more depending on the track system and panel materials.
Hinged doors may suit larger rooms better and can offer full access to the wardrobe interior in one go. In some cases they are the more affordable option, but that depends on the number of doors, the finish and the hardware.
There is no universal winner. The right choice is the one that suits the room and the way you use it.
Getting an accurate price for your home
Online estimates can help with early budgeting, but fitted furniture is one of those purchases where a proper survey matters. Room dimensions, ceiling height, skirting boards, sockets, awkward corners and access all affect the final design.
That is why homeowners often get the best outcome from a showroom visit or home design appointment. Seeing finishes in person, talking through storage habits and reviewing a planned layout gives you a far clearer idea of value than chasing the cheapest ballpark quote.
At Glide & Slide, that process is built around helping customers make informed decisions, whether they want a simple bedroom wardrobe or a full fitted storage solution tailored to a more complex space.
A wardrobe should make the room work harder, look calmer and feel properly finished. If the design does that and keeps doing it for years, the right question is rarely whether it was the cheapest option – it is whether it was the right one.

Glide and Slide Ltd provide professional design, manufacture and installation of fitted wardrobes, sliding wardrobes, made-to-measure fitted furniture, custom home office furniture & storage, media walls and bespoke kitchens across the West Midlands and surrounding counties. We regularly work in Birmingham, Sutton Coldfield, Solihull, Telford, Derby, Tamworth, Lichfield, Wolverhampton, Coventry, Leamington Spa and throughout Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Shropshire, Worcestershire, Warwickshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire, Gloucestershire, and Herefordshire. We also offer a nationwide DIY supply service for customers outside our installation area.