Will a bed (135x191x99 cm) fit in a room?
Expert analysis
A bed measuring 4 ft 5 in × 6 ft 3 in × 3 ft 3 in fits in a room, with about 1 ft 1 in to spare at the tightest point.
It fits with clearance on every axis.
Your bed will fit in the room, with a workable walkway around it.
| Axis-aligned check (before rotation) | ||||||
| WIDTH | 4 ft 5 in | ≤ | 8 ft 6 in | +4 ft 1 in | (+48.1%) | |
| DEPTH | 6 ft 3 in | ≤ | 9 ft 10 in | +3 ft 7 in | (+36.4%) | |
| HEIGHT | 3 ft 3 in | ≤ | 7 ft 10 in | +4 ft 7 in | (+58.5%) | |
How the room-fit check works
A room is a 2D footprint — width and depth matter for placement, plus the walkway gap left between the item and walls or other obstacles.
- Place the item footprint inside the room rectangle in the orientation it will be used.
- Compute walkway gaps from each item edge to every wall and to other obstacles in the room.
- Take the minimum walkway gap — that’s the daily-traffic clearance the room must support.
- Verdict ladder (getRoomVerdictTier): walkway <18 in DOESN'T_FIT; 18–24 VERY_TIGHT; 24–36 TIGHT; 36–48 FITS; ≥48 confident FITS.
Walkway thresholds use standard ergonomic minimums; a confident mover may negotiate gaps tighter than the recommended tier.
Dimensions
No dimension-specific assumptions surfaced for this check.
Space geometry
- Square corners and a flat floor
- Existing furniture footprints already factored out of the usable area
Handling
- ±¼ in tape-measure tolerance applied
- 1.5 in handling clearance subtracted from raw margins before the verdict
- Item treated as rigid — cannot compress, bend, or disassemble.
Why we make assumptions
ItemFits fills in anything you don’t measure yourself. Whenever you see [standard], the real value in your home may differ — measure it and message us in the chat below; we’ll re-run the math.
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