Last updated: March 2026
Enter your couch dimensions and doorway measurements to find out instantly — no guesswork, no stuck furniture.
Whether it fits depends on measurements most people get wrong.
Couch diagonal (corner-to-corner when tilted) vs. door clear width
Item: Standard 3-seat couch: 84" L × 35" W × 33" H
Space: Standard interior door: 80" H × 32" W clear opening
Actual clear openings are usually 1–2″ smaller than the labeled size.
Your exact dimensions probably aren't "standard." Small measurement errors cause big problems — 1 inch can be the difference between fitting and getting stuck.
Verdicts are calculated by comparing all 6 item orientations against the space dimensions using verified building code standards. See our methodology
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1 inch can be the difference between fitting and getting stuck.
“Checked my mattress before ordering. Tight fit, but it worked with the door removed.” — Online shopper
Measurements verified by the ItemFits engineering team · Based on IRC R311.2, IBC Chapter 10, ADA 404 · Our methodology
Standard sizes say it works — but your measurements are what matter.
Your couch is wider than your door. Here are 7 proven techniques to get it through — from tilting angles to door removal to the pivot-and-slide method.
Removing a door adds 2–3.5 inches of clearance — often the difference between a stuck couch and a smooth move. Here's exactly how to do it safely and quickly.
Door widths range from 24 to 36 inches depending on type, era, and country. Know your door size before buying furniture or planning a move.
Multi-step guides for real-world moves
Yes — removing the door and hinges typically adds 1.5 to 2 inches of clearance. Use a pin punch to tap out hinge pins from below. Keep the screws in the hinge plates so you don't lose them.
Most sofa legs unscrew or pop off, reducing height by 4 to 6 inches. Check for T-nuts or hex bolts underneath. Remove legs before attempting the doorway to avoid scratching both the couch and the frame.
Tilting a couch vertically (on its end) is usually the best approach for narrow doors. Measure the diagonal from one bottom corner to the opposite top corner — that's the dimension that must clear the standard door width.
Remove the door and hinges first (adds ~2 inches). Take off sofa legs (saves 4–6 inches of height). Stand the couch on its end and measure the diagonal — that dimension must be less than the door clear width. Angle the couch through the doorway at roughly 45 degrees, feeding the top through first, then pivot the base through. If you also need to navigate stairs, plan that route before you start.