$40 Within 10 Miles
$40 Within 10 Miles
How big is too big? That's the question almost every sectional buyer asks, and almost every one of them gets it wrong in the same direction — they buy too small. Then they get the sectional home, realize the chaise should have been on the other side, and live with it. We see this constantly at Tilleys Home Furnishings in Rockmart, GA. This guide covers how to size a sectional, which configuration matches how you live, and the construction details that separate a sectional you keep from one you replace in five years.
Before sizing or shape, decide what the sectional actually has to handle on a normal week. A sectional that hosts movie nights for five people every weekend is a different piece of furniture than one that mostly seats two adults with the occasional guest. Be honest about your real life, not the entertaining lifestyle you wish you had.
Think through: how many people sit on it on a typical weeknight, how many on a typical weekend, whether anyone naps or sleeps on it, whether kids and pets are on it daily, and whether it doubles as a guest bed. Each of those answers narrows the field. Frequent nappers need a chaise. Households with pets need performance fabric. Big entertainers need real seating capacity, not just visual size.
Configuration is the part most buyers underestimate. The four common shapes:
Pick the shape that matches your room layout, not just the showroom photo. A U-shape that looked great in the showroom can swallow a smaller living room. An L-shape with the chaise on the wrong end blocks the natural walking path through the room.
Sectionals are big, and the difference between a sectional that fits and one that doesn't is usually measured in inches. Three measurements you need before you shop:
Floor space. Measure the area where the sectional will sit, including walking paths. A sectional should leave at least 30–36 inches of walkway around it. If it blocks the path between the kitchen and the front door, you'll resent it within a month.
Doorway and stairwell clearance. Sectionals come in pieces, but the largest piece (usually the chaise or corner) still has to fit through your front door and any tight turns. Get the box dimensions of the largest piece and compare to your tightest pinch point.
Wall and ceiling height for visual scale. A massive sectional under a low ceiling makes a room feel like a basement. A small sectional in a great room with vaulted ceilings looks lost. Match the scale of the sectional to the scale of the room.
Sectionals get used hard. The fabric and cushion choices matter more here than on a piece that's used lightly.
For cushions, the same rules apply as with sofas. All-foam holds shape but feels firm. Down-wrapped feels plush but needs frequent fluffing. Spring-down splits the difference and is the most popular pick for sectionals because of how much sitting they absorb.
Two sectionals at the same price point can have very different lifespans. Things to ask about before you buy:
You don't have to memorize the list. Just knowing what to ask about gets you a much better conversation with the salesperson, and a much better chance of buying once instead of twice.
Stop by our showroom at 966 Cedartown Hwy, Rockmart, GA 30153 to see our full sectional collection in person — sitting on a sectional for two minutes tells you more than any photo. We carry Ashley Furniture, DreamCloud, Nectar, and we deliver throughout the Rockmart area. Browse our sectional collection online, see sofas for smaller spaces, or check out recliners to add seating. Have questions? Visit our FAQ or call us at 7706845314.
Next read: How to Measure Your Space Before Buying Furniture — the most important step before buying any sectional. Financing options available. Or visit our store.