Choosing the right oak dining table
The dining table is the piece of furniture that earns its place the most. It is where the household gathers every day, where guests settle in for the evening, and where the room finds its focus. Getting the choice right matters, which is why Neptune's collection spans a range of designs, each with its own character and construction.
For those who want a sense of permanence and architectural simplicity, the Arundel's refectory-style construction and exposed dowel-lock joints give it a solidity and presence that feels built to last generations. The Battersea brings a more sculptural quality, its turned legs inspired by the chimneys of Battersea Power Station, available in both rectangular and round. The Borough takes a slimmer, more refined approach, its A-frame base built with through-lapped and mortise-and-tenon joints for a table that is as strong as it is considered.
For larger rooms, Balmoral offers genuine scale and presence. Where a solid wood dining table needs to flex for entertaining, the Suffolk extends to accommodate more people without sacrificing its Shaker-style simplicity. Round dining tables, including the Stratford, Balmoral round, and Arundel round, suit square rooms and more intimate arrangements. Allow at least 90cm of clear space around any dining table to keep the room feeling comfortable.
Solid oak, built without shortcuts
Every Neptune dining table is made from solid oak throughout. There is no MDF, no chipboard, and no veneered surface that wears through over time. Oak was chosen as Neptune's primary timber from the outset, sourced from fully traceable, sustainable forests in the USA and Canada, valued for its strength, natural grain, and the way it improves with age rather than deteriorating.
The construction details are what separate a Neptune solid oak dining table from the wider market. The Arundel features a cross-bonded central panel, a technique rarely used in table making because of its complexity, but one that prevents warping over time and gives the table structural integrity that a standard solid wood dining table cannot match. The Battersea and Borough are both built using traditional mortise-and-tenon joinery, while exposed dowel-lock joints on the Arundel are a deliberate design choice as well as a structural one.
Every oak dining table in the collection is designed with the same founding principle: that a piece of furniture made well enough, from the right materials, should last long enough to become a future antique. Neptune backs this with a lifetime guarantee on all dining tables.
A finish that works as hard as the table itself
A dining table sees more daily use than almost any other piece of furniture in the home, which is precisely why Neptune developed IsoGuard® for oak surfaces. Unlike a traditional varnish or lacquer that sits on top of the wood and chips or dulls with wear, IsoGuard® works at a penetrative level, soaking into the oak and binding to the raw cellulose it finds there, forming a protective layer from within. The result is a surface that resists the spills, tannin marks, and daily contact a dining room table genuinely faces, while leaving the grain, texture, and warmth of the oak completely visible. There is no film to crack, no finish to wear through. The oak table simply improves over time, as a well-made piece of solid wood furniture always should.