Will a table (240x120x75 cm) fit in a room?
Expert analysis
A table measuring 94 in × 47 in × 30 in does not fit in a room, but it's about <1 in too large at the tightest point.
A table measuring 94 in × 47 in × 30 in does not fit in a room, but it's about <1 in too large at the tightest point.
Your table will not fit in the room — but only just — it is a hair over the limit at the tightest point.
Handling: What to try instead The item exceeds the space in every orientation — standard entry won't work.
| Axis-aligned check (before rotation) | ||||||
| WIDTH | 7 ft 10 in | ≤ | 8 ft | +1.5 in | (+1.6%) | |
| DEPTH | 3 ft 11 in | ≤ | 4 ft | +0.5 in | (+1.6%) | |
| HEIGHT | 30 in | ≤ | 8 ft | +5 ft 6.5 in | (+69.3%) | |
| Orientation | Min walkway | Strategy | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0° (as-is), long wall | 0.4" | floating | ✕ |
| 0° (as-is), short wall | 0" | — | ✕ |
| 90° rotated, long wall | 0" | — | ✕ |
| 90° rotated, short wall | 0.4" | floating | ✕ |
| diagonal (1°–89°) | 0" | — | ✕ |
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.
Walkway thresholds use standard ergonomic minimums; a confident mover may negotiate gaps tighter than the recommended tier.
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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