Will It Fit? How to Choose Furniture Sizes for Your Apartment
The costliest furniture mistakes rarely come down to style. More often, they are sizing errors. A sofa that looked perfectly proportioned online arrives and overwhelms the room, blocks circulation, or fails to fit through the front door. A dining table that seemed modest in a product photo suddenly consumes half the living area. Choosing furniture that fits your apartment requires more than measuring the piece itself. It requires understanding how that piece will function within the overall layout of the home. Here is how to make sure your furniture works before you commit.
Measure the room and the route
Start by measuring the wall where the piece will sit, the floor space it will occupy, and the pathways surrounding it. Then measure the delivery route: building entrances, hallways, stairwells, elevators, door frames, and any tight turns leading into the apartment. Many furniture purchases fail before they ever reach the room they were intended for. A piece that fits the layout but cannot physically make it into the apartment is still the wrong choice.
Know the clearances
- Walkways: Allow 24–36 inches for comfortable circulation throughout the space.
- Sofa to coffee table: Maintain approximately 14–18 inches for easy reach and movement.
- Around a bed: Leave at least 24 inches on each side that requires regular access.
- Dining chairs: Plan for roughly 36 inches behind chairs so they can be pulled out and used comfortably.
These dimensions may seem minor, but they are often what separates a room that feels effortless from one that feels cramped and frustrating to navigate.
Scale to the apartment, not the showroom
Furniture is frequently photographed in rooms that are significantly larger than the average apartment. Generous ceiling heights, wide-angle photography, and oversized spaces can make even substantial pieces appear smaller than they really are. Apartment-depth sofas, compact dining sets, and bed sizes selected with circulation in mind tend to perform better in smaller homes. When deciding between two sizes, the slightly smaller option often creates a more balanced and functional room while preserving valuable open space.
Tape it out
One of the simplest planning techniques remains one of the most effective. Before purchasing, use painter's tape to outline the furniture's footprint directly on the floor. Walk around it, sit near it, and live with it for a day or two. This quick exercise reveals circulation issues, visual bulk, and spacing concerns long before delivery day. It is a simple step that can prevent an expensive mistake.
Or let the plan handle the measuring
Every Apartment Archive Unit Pack is developed using your building's actual floor plan, with furniture selections scaled to fit the dimensions, clearances, and circulation paths of your specific unit. Rather than estimating whether a piece will work, you can make decisions based on a plan built around the realities of your apartment. The result is a more cohesive home, fewer returns, and greater confidence that every piece will fit the first time. See how it works.
Furnish your apartment with a plan, not a guess.
Every plan in the archive is built around a real floor plan. Find your building to see exactly what fits.