

Family-friendly 5-seater Rhino fabric corner recliner with cup holder console


Modern 7-seat L-shape recliner with four reclining seats and dual consoles


Luxe air leather 5-seat curved corner recliner with drop-down charging dock


Luxe air leather corner recliner with Bluetooth speaker, USB, and LED strip


Modern 5-seater electric corner recliner with wireless charging and LED light


Modern corner recliner lounge with reclining seats and contemporary silhouette

Family-friendly 5-seater Rhino fabric curved corner with reclining end seats

Modern fabric corner recliner with dual electric seats and storage console


Modern leather corner lounge with two reclining seats and manual or electric


Modern 6-seat fabric corner recliner with two-tone design and wireless charging


Modern corner recliner lounge with reclining seats and family-friendly footprint


Family-friendly 7-seater Rhino fabric corner recliner with twin USB consoles


Luxe 5-seater air leather corner recliner with wireless charging and storage


Modern corner recliner sofa with two reclining seats and cup holder console
Corner lounges with recliners — L-shape and U-shape options
A corner lounge with recliners — also called a corner recliner sofa, L-shape recliner sofa, L-shaped recliner couch, or modular reclining lounge — combines two of the most popular Australian living-room formats into one piece. You get the seating capacity of a 3+2 suite, the floor-space efficiency of an L-shape footprint, and the comfort of built-in reclining seats — all in a single coordinated lounge.
Across our range you'll find L-shape and U-shape corner lounges in leather, suede, air leather, and stain-resistant fabric, with both manual and electric recliner mechanisms. Many models include a storage console with cup holders, USB charging on electric versions, and modular configurations that can be reorganised to suit different room layouts.
L-shape vs U-shape corner recliner lounges
Two main corner configurations cover most living-room layouts:
L-shape recliner sofa
The most common corner format — the lounge runs along one wall and turns 90° at the corner, forming an L. Typically seats 5–6 people across the long side and the chaise extension. The L-shape works in most rectangular rooms and tucks neatly into a corner, freeing up the rest of the floor space. Most of our corner recliner lounges are L-shape.
U-shape corner lounge
Three sides of seating arranged in a U — long side plus two extensions, or two chaise extensions facing each other across a central seating area. Seats 6–8 people. Best for larger living rooms, media rooms, and households that regularly host. U-shape needs more floor space than L-shape — typically 4–5 m of clear space across the front opening.
Both configurations are available with end-seat reclining as standard. Select models offer additional mid-seat recline for fully-loaded lounging.
Left-hand-facing or right-hand-facing chaise
"Facing" describes which side the chaise sits on when you're seated on the lounge (looking out into the room):
- Left-hand-facing (LHF) chaise — when seated on the lounge, the chaise extends out to your left. The chaise "closes" the lounge on the left side, leaving the right side as the open end.
- Right-hand-facing (RHF) chaise — when seated on the lounge, the chaise extends out to your right. The chaise "closes" the lounge on the right side, leaving the left side as the open end.
Many — though not all — of our corner recliner lounges are available in both LHF and RHF configurations, so you can match the chaise direction to your room layout. The simplest way to decide: imagine yourself sitting on the lounge in your room. Which side do you want the chaise on? That's the configuration to choose. The product page for each lounge confirms which directions are available. If you're unsure, our showroom team can help you visualise it against your floor plan.
Which seats recline on a corner lounge
Corner recliner lounges aren't fully reclining across every seat — some seats are fixed to maintain the structural integrity of the corner section and chaise. A standard configuration looks like:
- End seats recline — the seats at each end of the long side are the standard reclining positions. Lever-pull on manual models, button-control on electric.
- Corner section is fixed — the seat at the bend doesn't recline (it's where the structural support sits). Often features cup holders or a storage console.
- Chaise extension is fixed — the extended chaise section is a stretched seat for lying out on, not a reclining position. The chaise itself is the recline equivalent for that side.
- Mid-seat recline (select models) — some of our corner lounges include an additional reclining position in the mid-section between the end seats. The product page lists the specific recline positions for each model.
Practically, this means a 6-seat L-shape corner recliner lounge typically gives you 2 reclining seats plus 4 fixed seats, with the chaise as a 5th informal "recline" position by lying along it.
Manual or electric corner recliner lounges
Both mechanisms are available across our corner recliner range. The trade-offs are the same as for individual recliners:
- Manual corner recliner lounges — lever-pull mechanism, no power point needed, more affordable, simpler. Best when the lounge will sit in the middle of an open-plan room or away from convenient outlets.
- Electric corner recliner lounges — button-control on each reclining seat. Many of our electric models include USB charging ports on the armrest or storage console, so you can keep phones and tablets powered while reclining. Power point access is needed for each reclining seat.
For storage and convenience, many of our corner lounges (manual or electric) include a fixed corner console with cup holders, and some have armrest storage compartments for remotes, books, and small essentials.
Corner recliner lounges in leather, fabric, and air leather
All four upholstery types are available across our corner recliner range:
- Top-grain and full-grain leather — premium upholstery for formal or feature lounge settings. Wipes clean and ages with character. Best for households wanting maximum life and finish quality.
- Air leather — bonded leather composite that breathes well in Queensland's subtropical climate. The Bradley range is upholstered in air leather. Easy to maintain, lower price point than top-grain.
- Suede — soft contemporary feel, available in select corner lounge ranges. Sits between fabric and leather in price.
- Stain-resistant fabric — easy-care option for households with kids and pets. Wider colour range than leather typically offers.
For a deeper dive into leather grades, see our leather recliners collection — the same leather grade information applies to corner lounge variants.
Featured corner recliner lounges in our range
A few corner lounge ranges worth knowing by name:
- Bradley Air Leather Corner Recliner Sofa — featured in the hero above. Air leather upholstery for Queensland's climate, with end-seat electric recline and integrated storage.
- Berlin Corner Recliner Sofa — one of our most popular corner recliner formats, with end-seat recline and L-shape footprint suited to most living rooms.
- Bailey Corner Recliner Sofa — alternative L-shape corner recliner option in our range, with similar core comfort and feature set.
- Bondi Corner Recliner Lounge — featured in the image above. Another L-shape corner recliner option.
Each product page lists the specific configuration (L-shape or U-shape, LHF or RHF chaise direction where applicable), recline mechanism (manual or electric), upholstery, and dimensions. Visit a showroom to test the corner section feel and chaise length in person — these are the two things hardest to judge from photos.
How much space does a corner lounge with recliners need
Corner lounges are space-efficient compared to multiple separate pieces, but they still need careful planning:
- L-shape footprint — typically 2.7–3.2 m along the long side, with a 1.6–2 m chaise extension. Total floor space when reclined: roughly 3.2 m × 2.5 m.
- U-shape footprint — typically 3 m along the back plus two extensions of 1.6–2 m each. Total floor space when reclined: roughly 3.5 m × 3 m or larger.
- Recline clearance — allow 60–90 cm behind each reclining seat for the recline action to extend (or 8–15 cm if you choose a wall-hugger model).
- Walking paths — leave at least 60 cm of clear walking space between the lounge and any other furniture or wall.
- Doorway access — measure the path from your entry door to the lounge position. Corner lounges arrive in multiple sections that need to navigate doorways and stairs during delivery — measure the narrowest point and check it accommodates the largest section.
Corner lounge or 3+2 recliner suite — which is right for your home
Both formats give you genuine recliner comfort with multi-person seating. The choice usually comes down to room shape and how you use the space:
Choose a corner lounge if
- Your room has a usable corner you want to occupy
- You want a chaise extension for stretching out
- You prefer one continuous seating piece
- Open-plan room — corner lounge defines a zone
- You like the modular look
Browse corner lounges with recliners above ↑
Choose a 3+2 or 3+2+1 suite if
- Your room is rectangular without a usable corner
- You want multiple reclining seats (3 or 4 reclining positions)
- You prefer the look of separate pieces
- You may want to reconfigure or rearrange in future
- You want an additional single recliner chair for accent seating
Visit a Showroom or Order with Free Local Delivery
Corner lounges are best chosen in person. The chaise length, the corner section depth, the LHF/RHF orientation against your room — all of these come through in a five-minute showroom visit much more clearly than in product photos. Visit any of our five South-East Queensland showrooms to see the full corner recliner range:
- Rocklea — Brisbane south-west
- North Ipswich — Ipswich
- Sandgate — Brisbane bayside
- Bundall — Gold Coast
- Beenleigh — Logan / between Brisbane and Gold Coast
We offer Free Local Delivery across the Brisbane and Gold Coast metro areas, with affordable delivery available to the Sunshine Coast, Toowoomba, Ipswich, Logan and wider regional Queensland. Corner lounges are delivered in sections that are easily assembled on site.
Frequently asked questions
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What's the difference between L-shape and U-shape corner lounges?
An L-shape corner lounge has one long side that turns 90° at one end into a chaise or extension, forming an L. It's the most common corner format and seats 5–6 people. A U-shape corner lounge has three sides of seating — a long back plus two extensions on either end, or two chaise extensions facing each other. U-shape seats 6–8 people but needs significantly more floor space (typically 3.5 m × 3 m or larger). L-shape works in most rectangular rooms; U-shape suits larger living rooms, media rooms, and households that regularly host.
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What does LHF or RHF mean for a corner lounge?
LHF (left-hand-facing) means the chaise extension sits on your left when you're seated on the lounge looking out into the room. RHF (right-hand-facing) means the chaise sits on your right when seated. The simplest way to decide: imagine yourself sitting on the lounge in your room — which side do you want the chaise on? That's the configuration to choose. Many but not all of our corner recliner lounges are available in both LHF and RHF configurations; the product page for each lounge confirms which directions are available.
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Which seats recline on a corner lounge with recliners?
The standard configuration has the two end seats reclining (one on each end of the long side), with the corner section and chaise extension fixed. The corner section often houses cup holders or a storage console, and the chaise itself is essentially a stretched-out reclining position. Some of our corner lounges include an additional mid-seat recline for fully-loaded lounging. The product page for each model lists exactly which seats recline.
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Do your electric corner recliner lounges have USB charging?
Yes — many of our electric corner recliner lounges include USB charging ports on the armrest or storage console, so you can keep phones and tablets powered while reclining. The product page for each electric model confirms whether USB charging is included. Note: each reclining seat on an electric corner lounge needs access to a power point.
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How much floor space does a corner lounge with recliners need?
L-shape corner recliner lounges typically need 2.7–3.2 m along the long side and 1.6–2 m for the chaise extension — roughly 3.2 m × 2.5 m of floor space when reclined. U-shape needs 3.5 m × 3 m or larger. Allow 60–90 cm of clearance behind each reclining seat for the recline action (or 8–15 cm for wall-hugger models), plus walking paths around the lounge. Also measure your delivery path — corner lounges arrive in sections that need to navigate doorways and stairs.
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Should I get a corner lounge with recliners or a 3+2 recliner suite?
Choose a corner lounge if your room has a usable corner, you want a chaise extension for stretching out, you prefer one continuous seating piece, or you want to define a zone in an open-plan room. Choose a 3+2 or 3+2+1 suite if your room is rectangular without a usable corner, you want more reclining positions (3+ vs 2), you prefer the look of separate pieces, or you may want to reconfigure the layout in future. Both formats give you genuine recliner comfort — the choice is about room shape and how you use the space.
