Planning a floor plan before moving furniture saves significant effort. The goal is to identify the one or two desk positions that satisfy all the constraints — clearance, light, power access, background — before committing to a layout. Most small rooms have fewer viable options than they appear to, which makes the planning process faster once you have the rules.
The clearance rules
These measurements are non-negotiable. Any layout that does not meet them will feel cramped or blocked in daily use.
| Clearance | Minimum | Comfortable | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Behind chair (chair to wall/furniture) | 80 cm | 100 cm | Needed to push back, stand, and move without obstruction |
| Desk side walkway | 60 cm | 75 cm | Minimum passable walkway; 60 cm is tight but functional |
| Door swing arc | Full arc + 30 cm | Full arc + 60 cm | Desk placed in the door arc makes the room unusable |
| Desk to window (minimum) | 50 cm | 70 cm+ | Prevents sitting too close to cold glass in winter |
| Under-desk knee clearance | 65 cm height | 70 cm height | Seated comfort; thigh must clear the desk underside |
How to map the constraints
Before drawing anything, walk the room and note:
- Fixed obstacles: Door positions and which way they swing, window positions, radiators, built-in wardrobes
- Power outlets: Mark where they are on the wall — the desk needs to be within reach of one, or you need a path for an extension lead
- Natural light direction: Which wall gets direct sun and when — this determines which wall the desk should face away from
- Minimum clearance zones: Mark the door swing arc and any passageways that must stay clear
Tape the desk outline on the floor using the actual dimensions of the desk you plan to use. Add the chair position behind it. This shows you immediately whether the layout works before anything is moved.
Common small room layouts
Room is longer than it is wide (rectangular room)
Place the desk on the shorter end wall, facing into the room length. This leaves the longer dimension as walkable space and puts the desk against a wall rather than jutting into the room.
If the shorter wall has a window, position the desk to one side of the window so the light comes from the side, or use a blind to diffuse the direct light.
Room is roughly square
A square room gives more options. The corner position often works best — it uses the dead corner space and leaves the centre of the room open. A straight desk on any wall works if the door and walkway clearances are met.
Avoid placing the desk in the centre of a square room unless the room is large enough (over 14 sqm) that the floor area on all sides remains usable.
Room has an alcove or recess
An alcove is one of the best small home office positions. The desk fits naturally into the recess, the walls on three sides contain the setup visually, and the floor area outside the alcove is fully recovered.
Minimum alcove depth for a desk: 55 cm for a laptop setup, 65 cm for a monitor. Check that a chair can be pulled fully out — the chair adds 50–60 cm to the depth requirement when seated.
L-shaped or irregular room
Irregular rooms often have natural desk positions at the junctions or recesses. Map the constraints zone by zone — the irregular wall creates a natural boundary that can define the work zone without any additional furniture.
Desk placement decision by priority
| Priority | Constraint | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Chair clearance (90 cm behind desk) | Non-negotiable — no functional workaround |
| 2nd | Door swing arc clearance | Non-negotiable — cannot block egress or daily movement |
| 3rd | Power outlet access | Can be solved with extension lead, but a longer cable is a hazard to manage |
| 4th | Window to the side (not directly behind or facing screen) | Significantly affects comfort; rearrangeable with blind as fallback |
| 5th | Walkway clearance (60 cm on active side) | Tight at 60 cm but passable; prioritise for frequently used paths |
| 6th | Video call background | Can be managed with backdrop; lower priority than physical constraints |
Measuring what fits
What a working small home office layout actually looks like
A functional small home office in a 10–12 sqm room typically uses one of these configurations:
Configuration A — Wall desk, single monitor: Desk (120 × 60 cm) against the longest wall, chair clearance behind it, shelves above on the same wall. Takes up roughly 120 cm of wall width and 150 cm of depth (desk + chair). Leaves the remaining floor area walkable.
Configuration B — Corner desk: L-desk (110 × 110 cm) in a corner, chair positioned in the open space diagonally opposite the corner. Shelves on both walls above. Takes up a 110 × 110 cm corner footprint. Chair clearance extends diagonally into the room.
Configuration C — Alcove desk: Desk built or fitted into an alcove (any width that fits, 55–65 cm deep). Chair pulls fully out into the main room. No floor space used permanently — the chair returns to the alcove when the desk is closed.
Frequently asked questions
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A functional single-person home office needs roughly 4–5 square metres of floor space — enough for a 120 × 60 cm desk, a chair with 90 cm clearance behind it, and a narrow walkway. In practice, most home offices are set up in rooms between 8 and 14 sqm, which allows for storage and a more comfortable setup.
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Start by placing the bed in its current position and marking the clearance needed around it. The remaining wall space is the candidate area for the desk. Check that the desk position leaves 90 cm of chair clearance and does not block the bed access or wardrobe. The longest unbroken wall section is usually the most workable desk position.
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Facing the wall is more practical in most small rooms. It puts the desk against a fixed surface for cable management and shelving, keeps the monitor away from the room's ambient distractions, and leaves the floor space behind the chair as the walkable area. Facing the room works if you want to see the door or have a pleasant view, but it generally uses more floor space.
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A minimum of 80 cm from the back of the desk to the nearest wall or furniture behind it. This allows a standard office chair to push back and the person to stand without obstruction. 100 cm is more comfortable for daily use. Measure this before finalising any desk position — it is the constraint that makes more layouts unworkable than any other.