# Bedsheet Sizes in Singapore: A Reference Guide

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

![Couple reviewing bedsheet sizes on a grey upholstered bed in a modern Singapore bedroom](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/couple-reviewing-bedsheet-sizes-singapore-bedroom.jpg?v=1780567071)

Buying a bedsheet in Singapore is the kind of task that looks simple until you are standing in front of the options and realise the sizes do not map neatly onto what you already own. A “Queen” sheet from one brand can be 10 centimetres shorter than a “Queen” from another. Fitted sheets can fall short on a thicker mattress. Flat sheets bought for a standard frame can hang unevenly once a topper is added.

This guide names the standard dimensions used in Singapore, explains where the common mismatches occur, and gives you a straightforward reference to carry into every bedding decision.

**Quick Answer:** In Singapore, bedsheet sizes follow bed frame dimensions: Single, 91 × 190 cm; Super Single, 107 × 190 cm; Queen, 152 × 190 cm; and King, 183 × 190 cm. Always cross-check the fitted sheet’s pocket depth against your mattress thickness, particularly if your mattress exceeds 25 cm.

## Standard Bed and Bedsheet Sizes Used in Singapore

The four sizes you will encounter consistently in Singapore retail are Single, Super Single, Queen, and King. Each size is defined by the mattress it covers, and the bedsheet dimensions that correspond to it account for a small amount of overhang on the sides and foot of the bed.

The table below sets out the standard mattress dimensions alongside typical fitted and flat sheet dimensions for each size.

Bed Size

Mattress (cm)

Fitted Sheet (cm)

Flat Sheet (cm)

Single

91 × 190

91 × 190, plus pocket depth

160 × 240

Super Single

107 × 190

107 × 190, plus pocket depth

180 × 260

Queen

152 × 190

152 × 190, plus pocket depth

230 × 260

King

183 × 190

183 × 190, plus pocket depth

260 × 280

Flat sheet dimensions vary more widely between brands than fitted sheet dimensions do, because the flat sheet’s length needs to accommodate both the tuck at the foot and the fold at the pillow end. If you prefer a generous turn-down, go one step larger than the listed standard for flat sheets. That small adjustment makes a visible difference to how the bed reads when it is made.

## Why the Super Single Exists, and Why It Matters in Singapore

The Super Single is a Singapore-market convention that does not appear in most international sizing guides. At 107 cm wide, it sits comfortably between a Single and a Queen: wide enough for one adult to sleep without compromise, narrow enough to fit in a room that a Queen frame would strain.

For first-home buyers fitting out a bedroom in a three-room or four-room HDB flat, the Super Single is frequently the considered choice: it gives the bed presence in the room without claiming floor space the layout cannot spare.

The practical consequence for bedding is that Super Single sheets are not always stocked internationally, so buying them online from overseas retailers carries a real risk of mismatch. Locally stocked bedding, sized specifically for the Singapore market, is the more reliable route. Esteller’s **[bedding bundles](https://esteller.sg/collections/bedding-bundles)** are sized to Singapore standards, which removes this particular headache.

## Pocket Depth: The Measurement Most Buyers Miss

![Grey upholstered bed with fitted bedsheet and bedding in a modern Singapore bedroom](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/grey-upholstered-bed-fitted-bedsheet-singapore-bedroom.jpg?v=1780567071)

Fitted sheet pocket depth is the distance from the edge of the mattress surface to the underside, measured vertically down the corner. Standard Singapore mattresses run between 18 cm and 25 cm thick. Once a mattress topper is added, that figure can reach 30 cm or beyond. A fitted sheet with a 25 cm pocket will not secure properly on a 30 cm mattress; it will lift at the corners during the night and need constant resetting.

Honestly, the pocket depth question is where most bedding decisions go wrong: the dimension is rarely printed prominently on the packaging, and it is easy to assume the sheet will stretch to fit. It does not. Check the pocket depth before purchasing, and if your mattress is thicker than 25 cm, specifically look for deep-pocket fitted sheets. Most will state 30 cm or 35 cm pocket depth if they carry it.

If you are investing in a **[storage bed with gas lift](https://esteller.sg/collections/storage-beds-gas-lift)** or a **[platform bed](https://esteller.sg/collections/platform-beds)** with a thicker mattress, take the mattress measurement with you when buying sheets. One number, taken once, prevents several returns.

## Thread Count, Weave, and What Actually Determines Feel

Thread count is the number of threads woven per square inch of fabric. It is a useful number in a narrow range: sheets below 200 thread count tend to feel coarse; sheets above 400 thread count tend to feel noticeably smooth to the hand. Beyond 600, the number becomes less meaningful than the weave and the fibre quality, because many high-count sheets achieve their figures by twisting multiple thinner threads into each count, which does not correspond to a proportionally better feel.

The weave matters alongside the count. A percale weave, with a one-over-one-under pattern, produces a crisp, cool surface that settles into a comfortable firmness after a few washes. It is the weave that holds up best in Singapore’s humidity. A sateen weave, with a four-over-one pattern, produces a smoother, slightly heavier surface that drapes well and feels immediately soft, but can trap more heat against the skin on warm nights. Neither is universally better; they serve different sleepers and different seasons.

For a Singapore home without air-conditioning in the bedroom, percale carries a clear practical advantage. For an air-conditioned room, sateen’s softer surface is the more easeful option. The fibre is the third variable: long-staple cotton, particularly Egyptian or Supima varieties, produces both weave types at a quality that is evident in the hand. Microfibre sheets are more resilient and faster to dry, which has real merit in a humid climate.

## Pillow and Bolster Sizing: The Companion Dimension

A bedsheet set is rarely complete without the pillowcases and bolster cases that carry the same fabric. Singapore bedrooms typically use two pillow types: the international standard pillow, 48 × 74 cm, and the local bolster, 20–25 cm in diameter and 100–120 cm long. Both dimensions are worth confirming before purchasing a bundle.

Standard pillowcases in Singapore are sized for the 48 × 74 cm pillow. European square pillow covers, 65 × 65 cm, are increasingly common in styled bedrooms but need to be purchased separately; they are rarely included in a standard Singapore bundle. If you use a bolster, confirm the bolster case is included in the set, as it is sometimes sold separately even when advertised as a complete set.

Esteller’s **[pillow and bolster](https://esteller.sg/collections/pillows-bolsters)** range is sized to local dimensions, which removes the guesswork when pairing new pillows with new bedding. Having the right pillow under the right case matters more than it sounds: a pillow that is too large for its case bunches at the corners, and one that is too small moves inside the case during the night.

## Matching Bedsheet Size to Bed Frame Type

Bed frame type affects the bedding decision in one specific way: how the fitted sheet is anchored at the corners. A divan bed, where the base is fully upholstered and there are no exposed legs, allows a fitted sheet to wrap cleanly to the underside of the mattress. A platform bed or a slatted base allows the same. A bed with a visible wooden or metal frame at mattress height can cause the fitted sheet’s elastic to sit above the base, which means the sheet needs a deeper pocket to grip properly.

For a **[wooden bed frame](https://esteller.sg/collections/wooden-beds)** where the mattress sits raised above the base rail, a sheet with 30 cm pocket depth will hold more reliably than a standard 25 cm version. For a **[divan bed](https://esteller.sg/collections/divan-beds)**, the standard pocket depth is typically sufficient. This is a minor point, but it is the kind of detail that becomes obvious only after the first night with a sheet that will not stay put.

## Singapore vs. International Sizing: Where the Differences Create Problems

The most common mismatch for Singapore buyers is the difference between local Queen sizing and the international variants. In the United States, a Queen mattress is 153 × 203 cm, which is 13 cm longer than the Singapore standard of 152 × 190 cm. An American Queen sheet will be noticeably longer than a Singapore Queen mattress needs, creating excess fabric at the foot. A Singapore Queen sheet will not reach the tuck at the foot of an American Queen mattress.

The same caution applies to King sizing: a US King is 193 × 203 cm; a Singapore King is 183 × 190 cm. An Australian King is 183 × 203 cm, which shares the width but not the length. If you are shopping from international retailers or buying sheets while travelling, match the dimensions rather than the size name. The name carries no consistent international standard. The centimetre figure does.

We have seen this create problems for first-home buyers in particular: a sheet bought abroad as a gift or picked up in transit, which then arrives in Singapore and fits nothing in the bedroom. Bring the mattress measurement when you shop, wherever you shop.

## A Note on Fitted Sheet Elastic and Long-Term Performance

![ouple relaxing on a grey upholstered bed with fitted sheets and layered bedding](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/grey-upholstered-bed-fitted-sheets-layered-bedding.jpg?v=1780567071)

The elastic on a fitted sheet degrades faster than the fabric. This is the detail nobody tends to flag before purchase: a sheet bought for its thread count and weave can outlast its elastic by several years, developing the habit of lifting at the corners long before the fabric itself shows wear.

Better-quality fitted sheets use wide, full-perimeter elastic rather than corner-only elastic, which distributes the tension evenly and holds its grip through more wash cycles.

Full-perimeter elastic is a simple specification to ask about. It is the kind of _cura dei dettagli_ (care for details) that separates a sheet that holds well across years of use from one that performs adequately for the first year and requires replacement much sooner.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is the most common bedsheet size in Singapore?

Queen is the most widely stocked size in Singapore, corresponding to a mattress of 152 × 190 cm. Super Single is the next most common, particularly for single-occupant bedrooms in HDB flats. King is available but less frequently stocked by all retailers, so confirming dimensions before purchasing is especially important at that size.

### Can I use an international Queen sheet on a Singapore Queen mattress?

A US Queen sheet, designed for a 153 × 203 cm mattress, will be approximately 13 cm longer than a Singapore Queen mattress needs. The fitted sheet will still grip the mattress, but the flat sheet and duvet cover will have excess fabric at the foot. The fit is workable but not exact. Where possible, buy sheets sized to Singapore dimensions.

### How do I measure my mattress for fitted sheets?

Measure the length, width, and height of your mattress. The height is the pocket depth your fitted sheet must accommodate. If you use a topper, measure the combined height of mattress and topper together. That combined figure is the pocket depth you need on your fitted sheet, not just the mattress height alone.

### Does the bed frame type affect which sheets I should buy?

Mostly in terms of pocket depth. A raised mattress on a frame with a visible rail may need a deeper pocket than a mattress sitting flush on a divan or platform base. The mattress dimensions themselves remain constant; the frame affects only how much of the fitted sheet needs to wrap under the mattress to stay anchored.

### What thread count should I choose for Singapore’s climate?

For Singapore’s humidity, a thread count between 200 and 400 in a percale weave is a well-judged starting point. Percale is cooler against the skin than sateen, and the weave holds up better across repeated washing in a warm, humid environment. If the bedroom is air-conditioned, a sateen weave at the same count range is a reasonable alternative for a softer surface.

## Conclusion

The right bedsheet is a straightforward purchase once the numbers are settled: mattress length, mattress width, mattress height including any topper, and the pocket depth of the fitted sheet. Those four figures, written on your phone before you browse, resolve most of the decisions that otherwise become guesswork.

The weave and fibre matter too, but they are secondary to the fit. A beautifully woven sheet that lifts at the corners every night has failed at its first task.

A bedroom that is well-considered, from the frame to the bedding, holds a particular quality: it receives you at the end of the day without requiring any adjustment. That is what the right bedsheet, chosen carefully, earns for the rest of the room.

Fresh pieces arrive through the year, so there is often something new to consider. Browse the current **[bedding bundles collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/bedding-bundles)** for sets sized to Singapore standards, with transparent material specifications across every option. The three-year warranty applies across Esteller’s range, and free delivery is included on orders above SGD 500. The 4.8 rating across 96 Google reviews reflects how these pieces have settled into actual Singapore homes over time.

When the dimensions are confirmed and the shortlist is narrowed, the Sembawang showroom welcomes visits daily from 10am to 10pm at 604 Sembawang Road, #01-18 Sembawang Shopping Centre. The design team can be reached at +65 6348 3144 or hello@esteller.sg to plan a visit ahead.

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> Source: [Esteller Furniture](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/bedsheet-sizes-singapore-reference-guide)
