Kitchen Islands With Attached Built-In Tables: Cooking Meets Conversation in Latest Trend
Kitchen remodels often limit homeowners looking for a quick refresh. Major fixtures like the stove, fridge, sink, and cabinets typically stay put unless you’re doing a full renovation. This means your design choices usually revolve around cabinet style, countertop material, wall color, and perhaps a bold backsplash.
Your kitchen island, however, is one place where you can play a little with different styles, shapes, and even features. An upgraded kitchen island can have a return on investment (ROI) of 50% to 150% and could mean an extra $2,500 to $7,500 in your pocket.
One hot new feature to watch: kitchen islands that have built-in tables — island-table combos — attached to them. We’re not talking about an extension of the island itself with room for a few bar stools. This kitchen island table trend is a full on eating area that’s clearly a separate table, but it’s attached to the island itself.
But the question is: Are kitchen islands with attached built-in tables a passing fad, or a rising trend with staying power? Read on to find out.
Is the island-as-table trend on the rise?
The kitchen island-as-table trend is a relatively new feature in kitchen designs, which is why you’re more likely to pull up portable kitchen islands with fold-down tables when you search for the trend online. But it’s definitely a trend on the rise and these are the main reasons why:
Creates a dedicated eating space
“I’ve noticed kitchen island tables appearing more and more often in kitchens in our area lately. A kitchen island table lets you designate a separate zone for eating,” says Elyse Moody, senior features editor at House Beautiful.
“Kitchens flow more smoothly when you have distinct zones for different tasks: dinner prep, homework, baking, coffee/drinks, eating, cleanup. It makes it easier when there’s a spot for everything.”
Makes serving easy
Long gone are the days when everyday family dinners added the formal step of transferring food into fancy china before serving. Today’s busy families are happy enough to serve up their meals right out of the pots and pans the food was cooked in.
Having the table attached to the island makes this casual dining option even easier, as you can get seconds without needing to get up from the table. As an added bonus, the stove and oven keeps the food warm and fresh in between helpings.
Provides an in-home chef’s table experience
Restaurants with exclusive chef’s tables may feel like a luxury, but a table attached to your kitchen island brings that same intimate experience right into your home.
Every dinner host knows that uncomfortable time in between when the guests arrive and when the meal is ready to be served. Dinner guests are left to their own devices in the living room, or stuck standing awkwardly in the kitchen, offering to help while trying desperately not to get in your way.
The built-in table solves this dilemma by providing a place for guests to comfortably relax and converse with you while you cook. It also allows the conversation to continue in between courses, unlike a formal dining room that requires you to leave the room to prepare and serve the next course.
Adds room flow
The smaller kitchens found in older homes rarely have room for an island at all, let alone one with an attached table — that’s why some homeowners choose to expand their kitchens into the formal dining room next door. But this often leaves the kitchen looking lopsided, with the original kitchen looking crammed together on one side with an empty, cavernous space on the other.
The kitchen island with a built-in table is a clever way to fill this space in a way that looks like a natural extension of the original kitchen.
Pros and cons to island-table combos
Choosing an island-table combination in your kitchen comes with two key advantages and two notable drawbacks.
Pro #1: Comfortable conversation while dinner is cooking
Back in the days when wood fires cooked the meals, kitchens were hot, messy places not conducive to enjoying the meals prepared there. With the advent of electric and gas ranges, “eat-in kitchens” became a huge selling point for houses because they allowed the family members preparing the meals to be part of the fun while dinner was cooking.
Kitchen islands with built-in tables continue that tradition, bringing conversation right to the meal prep zone instead of isolating it at a separate table across the room.
“A kitchen island table is an efficient way to accommodate your family, and it lets you face each other the way you can’t really when you’re sitting side by side at an island,” Moody says.
“When my family gathers and some people sit at the island, we always find that one or two people end up standing across from them to have a conversation while we eat. An island table solves that problem without forcing you to give up island space where you otherwise could have a pull-out trash can, dishwasher, or sink.”
Pro #2: Opportunity to bring in warm textures
“I’ve seen many attached tables in different materials from the rest of the island to set the eating space apart,” Moody says. “For instance, the table might be dark-stained wood, while the rest of the island is quartz or a lighter material. With natural wood making a comeback in the kitchen, it’s a nice way to layer in another texture.”
Most kitchens have only a handful of colors and textures: the cabinets, the countertops, the appliances, and the wall color — colors and textures that are often pale or hard.
With much of the wall space dedicated to cabinets, kitchens often have fewer windows, making them darker than the rest of the house, so homeowners often choose white or other light hues for their kitchen color schemes. And hard, smooth surfaces like stainless steel appliances and stone countertops, are easier to clean. While these choices are practical, they don’t leave a lot of room for warmth in the kitchen.
Enter the kitchen island-table combination. Attaching a warm, wood table to your cool, crisp quartz island brings in a softer natural texture with a warmer hue to brighten and soften the space.
Con #1: Island-height kitchen tables aren’t for everyone
Many of the built-in table options available attach to the kitchen island at the same height or slightly higher than the island itself. This means that your seating at the table needs to be barstool-height.
Unfortunately, barstool seating isn’t comfortable or accessible for everyone. Both the elderly and kids have difficulty getting into and out of barstools, and for the tiniest tots, sitting so high up is not practical or safe.
Con #2: Attached tables aren’t easily replaced
The biggest downside to tables attached to your kitchen island is that they aren’t replaceable like freestanding tables.
Whether you want it gone because it’s damaged or you simply want a new look, removing an attached table most likely will damage and leave marks on your island where it was attached.
Should you want to replace the table for aesthetic reasons, you’ll need to replace it with another attached table to cover up any damage or markings left from the removal of the original attached table.
On the plus side, attached tables are made from materials that are the same quality as your kitchen island. This makes them much more sturdy than the self-assembled freestanding tables you’ll find at your local home goods store. That durability means that you likely won’t need to replace your attached table due to wear and tear.