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Shop Rugs for Every Room & Style

Discover a thoughtfully selected range of rugs designed to add warmth, texture and comfort to New Zealand homes. Our collection focuses on quality wool rugs, jute rugs and wool-blend rugs in neutral tones and modern patterns, suited to living rooms, bedrooms and other key spaces.

Rug Styles & Colours

Colour is one of the most practical starting points when choosing a rug. The right tone can ground a room, add a focal point, or quietly tie existing furniture and walls together.

Grey Rug - A grey rug is one of the most versatile choices for a New Zealand home. It works across a wide range of interior styles, from Scandi-minimal to contemporary classic, and pairs easily with white walls, timber furniture, and both warm and cool accent colours. Lighter greys keep a room feeling open; darker charcoal tones add depth and can help disguise everyday wear in high-traffic areas.

White Rug - A white or off-white rug brings a clean, airy quality to a space. Best suited to bedrooms or lower-traffic areas, white rugs layer well with neutral bedding and pale timber floors. If you're placing a white rug in a living area, a tighter weave or flatweave construction tends to be more practical for spot cleaning.

Black Rug - A black rug makes a confident statement and works particularly well in modern or industrial-styled spaces. It grounds light-coloured furniture, defines zones in open-plan areas, and holds its appearance well in busy households. A black rug pairs well with brass or warm metal accents for contrast.

Green Rug - Green has become one of the most popular rug colours in recent years, spanning everything from soft sage and olive to deep forest tones. A green rug adds an organic, grounded quality to a living room or bedroom and works naturally alongside timber, rattan, and linen. Earthy mid-tones like sage and moss are particularly easy to work with as they complement both warm and cool palettes.

Choosing the Right Rug Size

Getting the size right makes a significant difference to how a room feels. A rug that's too small tends to make a space feel unbalanced, while the right size anchors the furniture and gives the room a finished, considered look.

A large rug - typically 200x300cm or bigger - is the right choice for most living rooms. In a standard lounge, a rug at this size allows the front legs of sofas and chairs to sit on the rug, which creates a cohesive, pulled-together feel. If your seating area is generous or you have an open-plan layout, sizing up to 240x330cm or larger will ensure the rug fills the zone rather than floating in the middle of it.

For bedrooms, a large rug placed under the bed should extend at least 60cm on either side so there's a comfortable surface to step onto in the morning. King and queen beds typically suit a 200x300cm rug placed with roughly two-thirds under the bed and one-third exposed at the foot.

In hallways, runners are the practical choice, but a large flatweave rug can work in a wide entry or open-plan dining space as a zone-defining layer.

As a general guide: when in doubt, go larger. Most rooms benefit from a rug that's bigger than the first instinct, and a larger floor rug will make the space feel more intentional and spacious rather than cluttered.

Rug Materials - What to Know Before You Buy

Wool Rug - A wool rug is the benchmark for quality underfoot. Natural wool fibres are resilient, naturally soil-resistant, and have a softness that synthetic materials rarely match. Wool rugs hold their texture well over time and suit living rooms and bedrooms where comfort underfoot is a priority. They're a longer-term investment but tend to outlast cheaper alternatives significantly.

Jute Rug - A jute rug is woven from natural plant fibres, giving it a distinctly textural, earthy look that suits coastal, organic, and Scandi-style interiors. Jute is durable and works well in living areas and dining rooms, though it's best avoided in high-moisture spaces. Because of its natural tone, a jute rug works as a neutral base layer that lets furniture and textiles take centre stage.

Wool-Blend & Easy-Care Rugs - Wool-blend and synthetic rugs offer a middle ground: softer than pure synthetics, easier to maintain than pure wool, and often available at a more accessible price point. These are well suited to families with children or pets where spills are a regular occurrence.

Styling a Floor Rug in Your Home

A floor rug does more than protect the floor - it defines a zone, introduces texture, and gives a room a sense of completion. A few simple principles make the most of your rug:

  • In living rooms, the rug should be large enough that at least the front two legs of your sofa and chairs sit on it. This visually connects the seating and makes the grouping feel intentional.
  • In open-plan spaces, a rug is one of the most effective tools for separating a lounge area from a dining space without using walls or furniture as dividers.
  • In bedrooms, place the rug so it extends beyond the sides and foot of the bed. This creates a soft landing in the morning and frames the bed as the focal point of the room.
  • Layering rugs - placing a smaller rug on top of a larger natural-fibre base like jute - is a popular technique for adding warmth and personality without committing to a single statement piece.

Shop Online or In-Store

Browse the curated rugs NZ selection online with delivery nationwide, or visit your nearest Farmers store to view selected styles in person.