Last updated: March 2026
Enter your furniture dimensions and freight elevator measurements — the app checks door clearance, cab space, and weight limits.
Whether it fits depends on measurements most people get wrong.
Furniture dimensions vs. freight elevator door opening, and total weight vs. elevator weight limit
Item: Varies — measure your specific furniture piece
Space: Residential freight elevator: 48–60" W door, 72" W × 96" D × 96" H cab, 2,500–5,000 lb limit
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
Takes 10 seconds · No signup needed
1 inch can be the difference between fitting and getting stuck.
“Showed the delivery guy the measurements. He agreed — we used the freight elevator instead.” — Apartment dweller
Measurements verified by the ItemFits engineering team · Based on ADA 407, ASME A17.1 · Our methodology
Standard sizes say it works — but your measurements are what matter.
Freight elevators are 2-3x larger than passenger elevators. Knowing which one your building has determines what furniture you can move.
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High-rise moves depend entirely on elevator access. Here's how to plan around elevator dimensions, building policies, and scheduling constraints.
Residential building freight elevators typically have a 48–60" wide door and a cab of about 72" wide × 96" deep × 96" tall. Commercial freight elevators are larger: 60–96" door, 96–120" wide × 96–120" deep cab. Always measure your specific elevator.
Contact building management or HOA to reserve the freight elevator. Most buildings require 24–48 hours notice and may charge a refundable deposit ($100–$500). Some buildings restrict freight elevator use to specific hours (e.g., 8 AM to 5 PM on weekdays).
Residential freight elevators typically handle 2,500–5,000 lbs. Commercial freight elevators handle 5,000–10,000 lbs. The weight limit is usually posted inside the cab or available from building management. Total weight includes the items, dollies, and the people riding the elevator.
Most freight elevators can handle a piano. An upright piano weighs 300–500 lbs and fits in any freight cab. A grand piano weighs 700–1,200 lbs and may need to be tilted on its side — check cab width. A concert grand (9+ feet) may not fit even in a freight elevator and requires professional piano movers.
Almost always, yes. Freight elevators are designed for bulk loads and have wider doors, deeper cabs, and higher weight limits. A typical freight elevator is 20–40% larger than the passenger elevator in the same building. However, some older buildings have similar-sized service elevators.