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By the UK Glass Kiln Hub — Expert Reviews & Guides for Home Glassblowers Team · Updated May 2026 · Independent, reader-supported

Glass Kiln Size Guide — Which Kiln Do You Actually Need? (UK Edition)

If you're researching kilns for home glasswork, you've probably noticed something: manufacturers list specifications like "chamber 30cm × 40cm," but that doesn't immediately tell you whether you can actually make the things you want. A kiln that's too small becomes frustrating within weeks. One that's too large wastes space and money. The right size depends on what you're actually going to make—and what your home can realistically accommodate.

This guide cuts through the spec sheets and helps you match kiln size to your specific glasswork.

Small Kilns: Jewellery, Dichroic Work, and Tests (Under 200 Litres)

Chamber dimensions: roughly 20–28cm wide, 15–20cm deep, 20–25cm tall.

What you can make:

Why choose this size:

Real trade-offs:

Best for: beginners, jewellery specialists, anyone in a flat or terraced house with limited space.

Medium Kilns: Mixed Practice and Small Panels (200–500 Litres)

Chamber dimensions: roughly 30–40cm wide, 25–35cm deep, 25–30cm tall.

What you can make:

Why choose this size:

Real trade-offs:

Best for: enthusiasts with a dedicated studio space (garage, spare room, outbuilding), makers doing both jewellery and small decorative work.

Larger Kilns: Production Work and Architectural Pieces (500+ Litres)

Chamber dimensions: 40–50cm+ wide, 35–45cm+ deep, 30–40cm+ tall.

What you can make:

Why choose this size:

Real trade-offs:

Best for: semi-professional makers, artists running a home studio, those with a dedicated garage or outbuilding and proper electrical infrastructure.

The Hidden Constraint: What Your Home Can Actually Support

Before you decide, check three things:

Electrical supply. Most standard UK circuits are 13A. A 4kW kiln on a full firing draws about 17A—too much. You need either a dedicated radial circuit from your consumer unit, or a kiln under 3kW. If you're renting, ask your landlord and get written approval.

Ventilation and heat. Even small kilns radiate noticeably. A garage is fine. A bedroom is not. You need airflow; a window or extractor fan is worth installing before you get the kiln.

Weight and floor. A medium kiln can weigh 80–120kg. Upper floors and suspended timber don't always handle this gracefully. Ground-floor workshops and garages are safer.

Choosing Your Size: The Decision Framework

Ask yourself, honestly:

  1. What's the largest single piece you want to make? (Measure it, don't guess.)
  2. How many pieces do you realistically fire per month?
  3. Is your space a flat, house, or dedicated studio?
  4. Can you run a dedicated circuit, or are you limited to standard sockets?
  5. Do you have outside space, or is this indoors?

Jewellery, pendants, small samples? Small kiln, every time.

Mix of jewellery and decorative tiles, occasional panels? Medium kiln.

Architectural commissions, production runs, or large vessels? Larger kiln—but only if your space and electrics can handle it.

Undersizing is frustrating. Oversizing is expensive and eats space. Matching your kiln to your actual practice, not an imagined future, means you'll actually use the thing.