Enter your washer dimensions and hallway measurements to verify clearance — dolly height, corner turns, and tight spots included.
Whether it fits depends on measurements most people get wrong.
Washer width (27") vs. hallway width at narrowest point
Item: Standard washer: 27" W × 27–34" D × 36–42" H (130–180 lbs)
Space: Standard residential hallway: 42–48" wide. Building code minimum: 36" wide
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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Most “it didn't fit” stories trace back to one of these oversights.
Frequently asked
Yes. A standard washer is 27" wide, and residential hallways are 36–48" wide. That leaves 9–21 inches of clearance in straight sections — more than enough. The tighter challenge is hallway corners, where the dolly must pivot the washer around the turn.
01Tilt the washer back on the dolly at about 45 degrees. Have a second person guide the top of the washer while the dolly operator pivots around the inside corner. The 27" width and 27–34" depth mean the washer needs less turning space than a couch or fridge. Use moving blankets at the corner to protect walls.
02Yes — always disconnect water supply hoses and the drain hose before moving. Cap the supply valves to prevent leaks. The hookup connections extend 2–4 inches from the back of the washer and can snag on walls or doorframes during transport. Tape loose hoses to the back of the machine.
03Both are the same 27" width. Front-loaders are deeper (30–34" vs. 27–28" for top-loaders) and heavier (150–180 lbs vs. 130–150 lbs), making them slightly harder to pivot at corners. Front-loader doors should be taped shut or secured with a bungee cord to prevent them from swinging open during the move.
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