Complete Rug Size Guide: What Size Rug for Every Room
Room-by-room rug sizing rules covering living rooms, bedrooms, dining rooms, and hallways — with exact measurements and furniture placement tips.
Getting rug size wrong is the most common (and expensive) decorating mistake. Too small and the room feels cluttered and disconnected. Too large and the rug fights the walls. This guide gives you the exact dimensions that work in every room, backed by decades of fitting handmade carpets into homes across 40+ countries.
Why Size Is the Most Important Decision
You can swap colours and patterns relatively cheaply. Swapping a rug because the size is wrong means paying for a replacement. At AJAYPEE CARPET, our most frequent customer service request is "I bought a 5×8 and it looks tiny — what went wrong?" This guide is designed to prevent exactly that.
Living Room Rug Sizes
The living room is the most size-sensitive room in the house because the rug has to relate to the furniture grouping.
Standard size rules: - 8×10 ft (240×300 cm) — works in most mid-size living rooms; fits front legs of a three-seater sofa and two armchairs on the rug - 9×12 ft (270×360 cm) — the go-to for large open-plan spaces or when you want all furniture legs on the rug - 6×9 ft (180×270 cm) — suitable for compact living rooms or apartment living rooms under 14 ft wide
The furniture-placement test: Lay newspaper or tape on the floor in the rug's shape before buying. Check that the sofa's front legs land on the rug. Leave 18 inches of bare floor between the rug edge and the wall on each side.
For L-shaped sofas: Size up to a 9×12 or even a 10×14. The rug should anchor the entire L, not just one arm.
Browse our [living room rug collection](/rugs/living-room) if you want to see sizes mapped to real room configurations.
Bedroom Rug Sizes
The goal in a bedroom is to have soft flooring underfoot when you step out of bed — not to cover the whole floor.
Standard size rules: - Queen bed (60×80 in): Use a 8×10 rug, positioned so the rug extends 2 ft past each side of the bed and about 18 inches past the foot - King bed (76×80 in): Use a 9×12 rug for the same overhang. A 8×10 will look cramped under a king - Twin or full bed: A 5×8 or 6×9 works, centred under the bed
Two smaller rugs alternative: Place 3×5 or 2×3 rugs on each side of the bed. This works well in master bedrooms where you want symmetry and have heavy furniture at the foot (a bench or ottoman).
Explore our [bedroom rug options](/rugs/bedroom) — most are available in the sizes mentioned above.
Dining Room Rug Sizes
The dining room has a strict functional rule: the rug must be large enough that chairs remain on the rug when pulled out.
Standard rule: Add at least 24 inches to every dimension of the table. A 36×72 inch (3×6 ft) dining table needs a minimum 7×10 ft rug. A 48×96 inch table (4×8 ft) needs at least an 8×12 ft rug.
Sizing by table shape: - Rectangular 6-seater: 8×10 ft minimum - Rectangular 8-seater: 9×12 ft minimum - Round table (54 in diameter): 8×8 ft or 9×9 ft round rug
The classic mistake: buying a 5×7 for a dining room. It looks fine with chairs in — the moment someone pulls out a chair to sit, the back legs drag off the rug.
Hallway and Entryway Runner Sizes
Runners are sized by hallway width, not length. The runner should leave 3–4 inches of bare floor visible on each side.
- ●Narrow hallway (3 ft wide): 2×8 ft or 2×10 ft runner
- ●Standard hallway (4 ft wide): 2.5×10 ft or 3×10 ft runner
- ●Wide entrance foyer: A 6×9 or 8×10 rug can anchor an entrance rather than a runner
Home Office and Study Rug Sizes
A 5×7 or 5×8 is usually sufficient to define the desk area. Make sure the desk chair's front wheels stay on the rug when you roll forward — otherwise the rug bunches under the chair.
Quick Reference: Room-by-Room Size Chart
- ●Living room, small (under 12×15 ft): 6×9 ft
- ●Living room, medium (12×18 ft): 8×10 ft
- ●Living room, large (over 15×20 ft): 9×12 ft or 10×14 ft
- ●Bedroom, queen: 8×10 ft
- ●Bedroom, king: 9×12 ft
- ●Dining room, 6-seater: 8×10 ft
- ●Dining room, 8-seater: 9×12 ft
- ●Hallway: 2–3 ft wide runner, length to fit
- ●Home office: 5×7 ft or 5×8 ft
How Handmade Rugs Differ from Machine-Made in Terms of Sizing
Machine-made rugs come in rigid standard sizes. Handmade rugs from Bhadohi can be woven to exact custom dimensions — the loom is set up for your specification. At AJAYPEE CARPET, custom sizing carries no premium for orders above a standard thickness. If your room calls for a 7×11 ft rug, you can have exactly that instead of settling for a 6×9 that's too small or an 8×10 that's too big.
See our [8×10 rug guide](/rugs/8x10) for the most popular size in detail, or explore the full [hand-knotted collection](/rugs/hand-knotted) where every piece can be ordered to spec.
Final Thoughts
The formula is simple: measure the room, map the furniture, then add the rug. Never do it in reverse. A correctly sized rug makes a room look curated and intentional. An undersized rug makes it look like an afterthought.
If you are unsure, order larger and use a rug pad to keep it in place — you can always fold a small overhang under, but you cannot stretch a rug that is too small.
Ready to order? Visit our [custom orders page](/custom-orders) to get the exact size woven for your room, or browse our [full collection](/products) for ready-to-ship options.
Frequently Asked Questions
What rug size is standard for a living room?
The most common living room rug sizes are 8×10 ft (244×305 cm) for medium rooms and 9×12 ft (274×366 cm) for large rooms. In smaller living rooms, 6×9 ft or 5×8 ft works well. The key rule: front legs of all seating should sit on the rug.
What size rug goes under a king bed?
For a king bed (76×80 inches), use at least a 9×12 ft rug centred under the bed with 18–24 inches extending on the sides and foot. An 8×10 ft rug with the bed positioned 2/3 of the way up also works and is more economical.
What size rug goes under a 6-seater dining table?
A 6-seater dining table (typically 72×36 inches) needs at least a 9×6 ft rug — ideally 9×7 ft — to keep chairs on the rug when pulled out. Allow 24 inches of rug beyond each side of the table.
Is a 5×7 rug too small for a living room?
For most living rooms, yes — a 5×7 ft rug will look undersized under a full sofa arrangement and make the room feel disconnected. Use a 5×7 ft rug as an accent piece in a small seating nook, as a bedroom rug, or layered under a larger rug. For a primary living room carpet, 8×10 ft is the practical minimum.
Can a rug be too big for a room?
Yes. Leave at least 12–18 inches of bare floor visible between the rug edge and the wall on all sides. This framing effect makes the room feel intentional and larger. A rug that runs wall-to-wall looks like fitted carpet, not a statement piece.
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