# Wardrobe Dimensions: Standard Sizes Explained

**By Megafurniture Admin** · 2026-06-04

Most first-home buyers measure the bedroom wall, note the available width, and assume any wardrobe that fits that number will work. What catches them out is depth. A wardrobe that is 50 cm deep stores folded clothes adequately but will not hang a shirt without the shoulders pressing against the door. A wardrobe that is 65 cm deep solves that, but steps noticeably further into the room. Width, height, and depth each carry a different consequence, and understanding all three before you choose saves a second purchase.

This guide explains what standard wardrobe dimensions actually mean, which numbers matter most for different storage needs, and how Singapore’s typical bedroom layouts shape those choices.

![Grey sliding door wardrobe in a modern Singapore bedroom, showing standard wardrobe dimensions, depth, and storage planning](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/grey-sliding-door-wardrobe-singapore-bedroom.jpg?v=1780564843)

**Quick Answer:** Standard wardrobe widths run from 90 cm, single, to 240 cm and above, multi-door. The critical depth for hanging clothes is 55 cm to 65 cm; anything shallower suits folded storage only. Standard height sits between 180 cm and 240 cm, with taller units using the space above as a top shelf or loft section. For most HDB bedrooms, a width of 120 cm to 180 cm at 60 cm depth resolves the majority of daily storage needs.

## Why Wardrobe Dimensions Matter More Than Style

The door finish, the handle profile, the colour of the carcass: these are all decisions you will make. But the dimensions determine whether the wardrobe actually functions. A piece that looks composed in a photograph but cannot hang a jacket properly, or opens its doors into the edge of the bed, is a piece that fails every morning.

In Singapore’s HDB bedrooms, the master room typically measures between 3.5 m and 4.5 m wide and 3 m to 4 m deep. A common room runs 2.8 m to 3.5 m wide. Those numbers leave less wall space than they seem, once the bed, bedside tables, and a circulation path of at least 80 cm are accounted for. The wardrobe has to earn its place within what remains, which is why depth and swing clearance matter as much as width.

For households equipping a first home, the temptation is to maximise width and worry about the rest later. The bit nobody tells you: depth is the dimension that most often causes regret. A wardrobe ordered online at 45 cm deep will arrive looking correct, but it will store only folded items. If you intend to hang clothes, the minimum is 55 cm, and 60 cm to 62 cm is the considered standard.

## Standard Wardrobe Widths: What Each Size Suits

Wardrobe widths are typically sold in increments of 30 cm to 40 cm, from a narrow single unit at around 90 cm to full-wall configurations at 240 cm and beyond. Each width range suits a particular room and storage need.

Width

Door Type

Typical Use

Room Suit

90 cm – 120 cm

Single swing or 2-panel sliding

Light clothing, one person

Common room, study bedroom

120 cm – 160 cm

2-door swing or sliding

One adult’s full wardrobe

Common room, smaller master

160 cm – 200 cm

2–3 door swing or 2–3 panel sliding

One adult or couple sharing lightly

Mid-size master bedroom

200 cm – 240 cm

3–4 door swing or 3-panel sliding

Couple sharing, full wardrobe plus linen

Larger master bedroom

240 cm and above

Sliding only, swing clearance unavailable

Full wall storage, wardrobe plus display

Larger master or walk-in layouts

A width of 160 cm to 200 cm covers most Singapore master bedroom situations well, allowing enough hanging sections for two people without overwhelming the room. At 120 cm, you are equipping one person’s wardrobe and accepting some compromise on folded storage. Below 90 cm, a **[chest of drawers](https://esteller.sg/collections/chest-of-drawers)** often serves better than a narrow wardrobe.

## The Depth Question: Hanging Space Versus Floor Space

Depth is the dimension where the form-and-function tension is sharpest. A 55 cm depth allows clothes to hang on a standard rail without the hangers pressing against the door panel; 60 cm to 62 cm is more comfortable, giving a small gap behind the hanger. At 65 cm, the hanging space is well-judged for coats and thicker garments, but the wardrobe now projects further into the room.

For bedrooms where floor space is already tight, 60 cm is the practical answer. It resolves the hanging requirement without the footprint of a deeper unit. The difference between 60 cm and 65 cm sounds negligible on paper; in a 3 m wide common room, those five centimetres change the feel of the space.

Sliding door wardrobes carry a particular advantage here. Because the doors track along the face of the unit rather than swinging out, the effective depth into the room is exactly the carcass depth, nothing more. A swing door at 60 cm depth adds another 60 cm of clearance when open. That consideration shapes the door-type decision for rooms where the bed sits close to the wardrobe wall, which is to say, most Singapore bedrooms.

Browse the **[sliding door wardrobe collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/sliding-door-wardrobes)** for configurations designed around this constraint, with panels that track cleanly and frames built on kiln-dried hardwood for long-term stability.

## Standard Wardrobe Heights: Floor-to-Ceiling or Freestanding?

![Man standing near a grey sliding door wardrobe in a refined bedroom, showing practical wardrobe width and storage layout](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/grey-sliding-door-wardrobe-storage-layout.jpg?v=1780564843)

Standard freestanding wardrobe heights sit between 180 cm and 210 cm. Floor-to-ceiling configurations, whether built-in or tall freestanding units, run up to 240 cm in most Singapore flats, which aligns with the typical HDB ceiling height of 260 cm, leaving a 20 cm gap that is usually filled with a top panel or cornice.

The practical difference between a 180 cm unit and a 240 cm unit is the top section. A 180 cm wardrobe finishes below ceiling height, leaving a shelf-free zone above that most households end up using for seasonal storage in an ad hoc way, boxes stacked on top, an extra pillow balanced on a bag. A taller unit brings that zone into the wardrobe, behind a door or above a fixed shelf, where it is more accessible and looks considerably more composed.

For first-home buyers, the taller unit is generally the better investment if the room allows it. The additional storage earns its place quickly, and the visual line of a floor-to-ceiling wardrobe tends to settle into the room rather than interrupt it.

Standard ceilings in Singapore condominiums often run 270 cm to 280 cm, which allows a 240 cm tall wardrobe with a 30 cm to 40 cm top shelf above. Measure the ceiling height before ordering: a unit specified at 240 cm will read differently in a 260 cm HDB room than in a 280 cm condo room.

## Swing Door Versus Sliding Door: How the Door Type Changes the Dimension Brief

The door mechanism is not a style choice. It is a structural decision that changes the effective dimensions you should be planning around.

### Swing door wardrobes

A swing door wardrobe requires clearance in front equal to the door panel width, typically 45 cm to 60 cm. In a bedroom where the bed sits opposite the wardrobe, that clearance must come out of the circulation path. In a room where the gap between bed and wardrobe is 80 cm, a 60 cm door panel leaves 20 cm of actual passage when the door is open. That is the number to check before ordering.

### Sliding door wardrobes

A sliding door wardrobe removes that calculation entirely, but introduces a different one: at any given moment, one portion of the wardrobe interior is covered by a panel. Access to both hanging sections at once requires panels that park fully to one side or the other. For wardrobes above 180 cm wide, the standard two-panel configuration will always cover part of the interior. A three-panel track resolves this for wider units.

The **[modular wardrobe collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/modular-wardrobes)** and the **[open door wardrobe range](https://esteller.sg/collections/open-door-wardrobe)** offer configurations suited to different door preferences, room sizes, and storage arrangements.

## Interior Layout: Hanging Rail, Shelves, and Drawers

![Large grey sliding wardrobe with dark glass panels in a bright bedroom, showing full-height wardrobe storage and clean design](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/large-sliding-wardrobe-dark-glass-panels.jpg?v=1780564843)

The external dimensions define what the wardrobe can hold; the internal layout determines whether it holds those things conveniently.

### Hanging rail height

A standard full-height hanging section is 160 cm to 170 cm tall, which accommodates long dresses and coats. A half-height section, typically 80 cm to 90 cm, suits shirts and folded trousers hung over the rail. Most wardrobes combine both: one full-height hanging zone on one side and a double-hanging or shelved zone on the other.

### Shelf spacing

Fixed shelves work well for folded knitwear and accessories, but the shelf spacing matters. Shelves at 30 cm to 35 cm intervals store folded clothes efficiently; wider spacing often leads to stacks that topple. Adjustable shelf pins allow the interior to be reconfigured as storage needs shift over a few years, which is a practical feature worth confirming before purchase.

### Internal drawers

Internal drawers built into the wardrobe base are a thoughtful addition for accessories and smaller items, particularly in bedrooms without a **[dedicated chest of drawers](https://esteller.sg/collections/chest-of-drawers)** or **[bedside table](https://esteller.sg/collections/bedside-tables)** with drawer storage.

## Measuring Your Bedroom: A Practical Checklist

Before shortlisting any wardrobe, take four measurements and record them together.

1.  **Wall width available:** Measure the full wall span and subtract any door frames, light switches, or skirting board projections. The usable width is what remains.
2.  **Ceiling height:** Measure at the wall where the wardrobe will sit, not in the centre of the room. Ceiling heights are not always consistent in older HDB flats.
3.  **Gap between wardrobe wall and bed:** This is your swing clearance check. If the gap is under 100 cm, a sliding door configuration removes a daily frustration.
4.  **Room depth:** Confirm the wardrobe depth you are considering still leaves an 80 cm circulation path from the wardrobe face to any furniture opposite.

On a Saturday morning before the household is fully awake, the bedroom at its quietest reveals which surface and spatial decisions were considered and which were made too quickly. A wardrobe that opens without negotiation, holds what the household actually owns, and sits in proportion with the room is one of those decisions that settles into daily life without drawing attention to itself. That is, in the language of _ben fatto_ well-made design, exactly the point.

Esteller’s affordable luxury range, from approximately SGD 600 to SGD 2,500, is built on frames designed to hold their geometry across years of daily use, backed by a three-year warranty across every piece. The 4.8 average rating from 96 Google reviews reflects how these wardrobes perform over time in actual homes, not only in the showroom.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is the standard wardrobe depth for hanging clothes?

The minimum depth for hanging clothes is 55 cm, measured from the back panel to the front of the door. A depth of 60 cm to 62 cm is the standard most wardrobes use, allowing hangers to sit freely on the rail without pressing against the door. At less than 50 cm, the wardrobe suits folded storage only.

### What wardrobe width fits a typical HDB bedroom?

For a master bedroom in a three-room or four-room HDB flat, a wardrobe between 160 cm and 200 cm wide fits the available wall space for most layouts, once the bed and circulation path are accounted for. A common room typically suits a 120 cm to 160 cm unit. Measure the usable wall width first, then match to the standard widths your chosen wardrobe range offers.

### Is a floor-to-ceiling wardrobe better than a standard-height one?

For most Singapore homes, yes. A floor-to-ceiling unit uses the space above 180 cm as enclosed, accessible storage rather than as an informal shelf for ad hoc boxes. It also reads as more composed in the room. The practical consideration is that HDB ceiling heights vary between 260 cm and 265 cm, so confirm the ceiling height at the installation wall before specifying a 240 cm unit.

### Should I choose a sliding door or swing door wardrobe?

If the gap between the wardrobe and the bed is under 100 cm, a sliding door wardrobe is the practical choice: it removes the swing clearance requirement entirely. If the room allows more than 100 cm of clear space opposite the wardrobe, a swing door configuration offers full simultaneous access to the interior. The decision follows the room, not the aesthetic.

### What internal layout works best for a couple sharing a wardrobe?

A wardrobe of at least 160 cm wide, configured with one full-height hanging section per person and a central shelved or drawer zone, accommodates two adults’ clothing without constant negotiation. Above 200 cm, adding a second full-height section or a double-hanging zone on one side gives enough capacity for most households’ combined wardrobe, including occasional and seasonal items.

## Choosing Well, Once

A wardrobe is not a decision that announces itself; it is one that quietly shapes every morning. When the dimensions are right, the doors clear the bed, the hanging rail is deep enough, and the shelves hold what needs to be shelved, the piece disappears into daily use. That is the standard to hold it to.

Explore the full **[sliding door wardrobe collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/sliding-door-wardrobes)** for current configurations, with dimensions, interior layouts, and material specifications listed clearly. Every piece carries Esteller’s three-year warranty, and free delivery applies on orders above SGD 500. The collection grows through the year, each addition chosen with the same care.

The **[bedroom furniture collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/bedroom-furniture)** is worth browsing alongside: the height of a **[nightstand](https://esteller.sg/collections/nightstands)**, the depth of a **[chest of drawers](https://esteller.sg/collections/chest-of-drawers)**, and the footprint of a **[bed frame](https://esteller.sg/collections/bed-frames)** together shape how a wardrobe of any size will actually sit in the room.

The design team at the Sembawang showroom is available daily from 10am to 10pm to discuss configurations, interior layouts, and how a wardrobe will read within your particular room. Bring your floor plan and your four measurements. Most decisions resolve in a single conversation. Visit at 604 Sembawang Road, #01-18 Sembawang Shopping Centre, or reach the team ahead at +65 6348 3144 or hello@esteller.sg.

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> Source: [Esteller Furniture](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/wardrobe-dimensions-standard-sizes-explained)
