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Housing in Transition

Why the Dining Room Is Disappearing From More Households

Dining Room Disappears
More and more houses and apartments no longer have a separate dining room. Photo: Getty Images
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October 30, 2025, 2:02 pm | Read time: 5 minutes

The dining room was once the heart of the house. A room with a large table, over which a pendant light hovered, where the family gathered on Sundays and guests took their seats. For decades, the dining room symbolized togetherness, hospitality, and structure in daily life. But today? The dining room is increasingly disappearing from many homes, and especially in new constructions, it is often hard to find. myHOMEBOOK interior expert Mareike Schmidt explains why this is happening and what new living arrangements are taking its place.

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The Room That Needs Too Much Space

One of the main reasons for the disappearance of the dining room is simply a lack of space. Living space has become significantly more expensive in recent years, especially in cities, where every square foot must be carefully considered. Rooms today need to be flexible and serve multiple functions. A separate room used only for a few meals a week seems to many like an outdated luxury from times past.

Instead, living, working, and eating are increasingly merging. The dining table is no longer in its own room but becomes part of an open living area. It serves as a workspace in the morning, a craft area for children in the afternoon, and a gathering spot for friends in the evening. This multifunctionality reflects a new living culture where efficiency and practicality are more important than formal representation. The dining table becomes the center of daily life and less a venue for polished etiquette, but rather a place of lived community.

Also interesting: Not just for small spaces! Why round dining tables are trending

The Change in Our Lifestyles

The traditional family model, where meals are regularly shared at the dining table, is no longer a given. The classic meal times–breakfast, lunch, and dinner–are losing their unifying function because many people’s daily lives are more fragmented today. Flexible working hours, shift work, and home offices make it harder to maintain shared routines. Added to this is a pronounced to-go culture, where meals are increasingly consumed on the go or in between, whether on the train, on the way to work, or during a walk in the park. Even dinner, once a symbol of family togetherness, is often replaced today by individual schedules, food delivery apps, and streaming dinners on the couch.

The new reality is both pragmatic and individual: We eat wherever we are–at the kitchen counter, on the balcony, in front of the laptop, or even in bed. Eating becomes an activity that adapts to life, not the other way around. The dining room as a ritual place of gathering is losing its significance. It is replaced by spontaneous encounters in the kitchen or casual conversations over the laptop. This also shifts the symbolism of eating, away from the shared ritual to the expression of a flexible, mobile, and digitalized lifestyle.

Open Living Instead of Formal Dining

In the world of interior design, a clear trend has emerged over the past two decades: open floor plans. Kitchen, dining, and living areas merge into a seamless unit. Instead of clear room boundaries, transitions, sightlines, and functional zones determine the design. The social center of the house or apartment has noticeably shifted–often to the kitchen. Here, it’s not just about cooking anymore, but also living: chatting, working, eating together, and entertaining friends–all in one place. The classic dining room, separated from the action, no longer fits this lifestyle of openness, spontaneity, and community.

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Nostalgia Meets Redefinition

The dining room hasn’t completely disappeared; it has rather reinvented itself. In some larger homes, it remains as a “dining space” or “social room,” serving as a deliberate counterpoint to the hectic everyday life. Here, dining is not just eating but celebrating: The room is carefully designed, often with designer chairs, striking lights, and selected art on the walls. The furnishings reflect the individual style of the residents and their desire to give special moments a pleasant setting. It is usually a staging: a place for special occasions, not for every day.

What Remains: The Table as a Symbol

Even if the room disappears, its centerpiece–the table–remains. It is the piece of furniture where our lives converge: working, playing, eating, discussing, celebrating. Perhaps this is the true evolution of the dining room: It lives on, not as a room, but as an idea.

The dining room, as we knew it, is a relic of a time with clear roles, fixed routines, and Sunday rituals. But in its place comes something more vibrant, more flexible–spaces that adapt to us, rather than the other way around. In a world where everything is in motion, living spaces can flow too, and perhaps that is the progress.

This article is a machine translation of the original German version of MYHOMEBOOK and has been reviewed for accuracy and quality by a native speaker. For feedback, please contact us at info@myhomebook.de.

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