How to Choose the Right Hallway Runner
The hallway is the first thing you see when you walk into your home -- and the last thing you see when you leave. A well-chosen runner makes an immediate impression, adds warmth and character to what is often a narrow, difficult space, and protects the floor in one of the most heavily trafficked areas in any home.
Choosing the right one requires thinking about size, material and pile height in ways that are quite different from choosing a rug for a living room or bedroom.
Getting the Size Right
The width of a hallway runner should leave a gap of 10-20cm on either side between the runner edge and the wall. Too wide and the hall feels cramped; too narrow and the runner looks lost.
For most UK hallways, standard runner widths of 60cm, 70cm or 80cm work well. Wider hallways can take 100cm or more.
Length is easier: the runner should extend the full length of the hall, ideally stopping a short distance from each end wall rather than running hard against it. If your hallway bends or has a return, measure carefully -- some runners can be cut to length and re-hemmed, or you can use two runners end to end with a small gap between.
Stair Runners
For stairs, a runner is both practical and transformative. Standard stair runner width is typically 60-70cm for most UK staircases, leaving a border of bare stair on either side. To calculate the length needed, measure the depth of each tread plus the height of each riser, then multiply by the number of stairs and add extra for the landing.
Stair runners must be secured with gripper rods or stapled in place -- a loose stair runner is a genuine safety hazard. Many rug retailers and carpet fitters can cut and bind runners to the exact length you need.
The Best Materials for a Hallway Runner
Wool
Wool is the ideal material for a hallway runner. It is highly durable, naturally stain-resistant, and widely available in runner format. A good wool runner will outlast most other flooring choices in the hallway. Kelaty's wool collection includes runners in a range of patterns and pile heights suited to busy hallways.
Polypropylene
For very high-traffic hallways -- particularly those with outside access where mud and moisture are a concern -- a polypropylene runner is a practical choice. It cleans easily, resists moisture, and is extremely hardwearing. Modern polypropylene runners are difficult to distinguish from wool by sight.
What to Avoid
Viscose and silk runners are not suitable for hallways. These delicate fibres are not built for heavy traffic and are sensitive to moisture -- a combination that makes them poorly suited to the conditions a busy hallway presents daily.
Pile Height: Keep It Low
Low pile and flatweave are almost always the right choice for a hallway runner. Deep pile traps dirt, is harder to vacuum, and becomes crushed-looking quickly in a high-traffic area. A low-pile or flatweave runner maintains its appearance far longer. For stair runners, low pile is essential -- deep pile on stairs is impractical and can be slippery.
Pattern and Colour
Pattern is a practical ally in a hallway. It disguises dirt, hides minor wear and gives the eye something to follow down the length of the hall. Traditional designs -- geometric, Oriental, striped -- have been used in hallways for centuries for exactly this reason.
Darker colours and mid-tones are more practical than very pale shades, which show every mark. A warm tone -- terracotta, deep red, navy or sage green -- brings colour and life to what is often a narrow or dimly lit space.
Securing Your Runner
Any runner on a hard floor must be properly secured. Use a non-slip underlay cut to size, or double-sided carpet tape along the edges. On stairs, gripper rods are the professional and safest solution. A runner that moves is a trip hazard -- always ensure it is firmly fixed before use.
Hallway Runners at Kelaty
Kelaty stocks a wide range of runners in standard and custom lengths, across wool, polypropylene and natural fibre constructions. Browse the full runner range at kelaty.com.