Everything you need to know about moving furniture through hallways. Standard widths, turning radius calculations, and L-shaped corridor navigation.
Hallway Guides
Everything you need to know about moving furniture through hallways. Standard widths, turning radius calculations, and L-shaped corridor navigation.
Building code minimums, typical widths by home type, and how to measure yours.
How to calculate the turning radius for furniture at hallway corners.
Techniques for L-shaped corridors, T-junctions, and other common apartment layouts.
Measure smart
Four numbers decide nearly every fit check. Get these right and the rest follows.
Don't make these
Most “it didn't fit” stories trace back to one of these oversights.
Frequently asked
A straight hallway only tests width, but a corner tests length and diagonal at the same time. A long item can bridge a turn and jam even when both halls are wide enough on their own.
01Residential hallways are commonly 36–42 inches, and building codes set a minimum around 36 inches for most homes. Apartment and older-home halls can be narrower, so measure your own.
02Lead with one end into the second hall, pivot at the corner, and walk the trailing end around — sometimes standing the item on end. The turning space, not the straight width, decides if it works.
03It comes down to the item's length and diagonal against the combined width of both halls at the turn. Our hallway calculator runs the geometry for your exact dimensions.
04Enter your item and space above, get an instant fit verdict.
Open the fit calculator