Find the exact room dimensions you need for your pool table — includes cue clearance, buffer zones, and metric/imperial support
| Table Size | Table Dimensions | Playing Surface | Min Room (58" cue) | Min Room (48" cue) | Ideal Room |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 ft Bar | 39" x 78" | 36" x 72" | 13'7" x 17'6" | 11'7" x 15'6" | 14' x 18' |
| 8 ft Standard | 44" x 88" | 41.5" x 83" | 14'8" x 18'8" | 12'8" x 16'8" | 15' x 19' |
| 9 ft Pro | 50" x 100" | 46" x 92" | 15'2" x 19'8" | 13'2" x 17'8" | 16' x 21' |
| 10 ft Oversized | 56" x 112" | 50" x 100" | 15'8" x 21'" | 13'8" x 19' | 17' x 22' |
| 10 ft Snooker | 56" x 112" | 52" x 104" | 15'8" x 21' | 13'8" x 19' | 17' x 22' |
| 12 ft Snooker | 68" x 144" | 64" x 128" | 17'8" x 24' | 15'8" x 22' | 19' x 25' |
| Bumper Pool | 36" x 52" | 32" x 48" | 11'6" x 14'10" | 9'6" x 12'10" | 12' x 16' |
| Table Type | Overall L x W | Surface L x W | Height | Weight (approx) | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 ft Bar / Economy | 78" x 39" | 72" x 36" | 29"–31" | 400–500 lbs | Bars, small spaces |
| 8 ft Home Standard | 88" x 44" | 83" x 41.5" | 29"–31" | 600–800 lbs | Home game rooms |
| 9 ft Pro / Tournament | 100" x 50" | 92" x 46" | 29"–31" | 800–1000 lbs | Clubs, tournaments |
| 10 ft Oversized | 112" x 56" | 100" x 50" | 29"–31" | 900–1200 lbs | Large game rooms |
| 10 ft Snooker | 112" x 56" | 104" x 52" | 33"–34" | 1200–1500 lbs | Snooker clubs |
| 12 ft Full Snooker | 144" x 72" | 128" x 64" | 33"–34" | 1500–2000 lbs | Professional snooker |
| Bumper Pool | 52" x 36" | 48" x 32" | 28"–30" | 150–250 lbs | Small rooms, families |
| Cue Length | Clearance Needed (each side) | Total Width Added | Total Length Added | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 58" Standard | 58" (4'10") | 116" (9'8") | 116" (9'8") | Standard home / club |
| 52" Medium | 52" (4'4") | 104" (8'8") | 104" (8'8") | Slightly smaller rooms |
| 48" Short / Bar | 48" (4'0") | 96" (8'0") | 96" (8'0") | Tight rooms, bars |
| 36" Mini | 36" (3'0") | 72" (6'0") | 72" (6'0") | Corner shots only |
| Players | Game Format | Recommended Table | Room Buffer | Est. Game Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 8-Ball / 9-Ball / Straight | 8 ft or 9 ft | Standard (5 ft sides) | 15–30 min |
| 3 | Rotation / Cutthroat | 8 ft or 9 ft | +10% buffer | 20–45 min |
| 4 | Doubles / Partners | 9 ft preferred | +15% buffer | 30–60 min |
| 6 | Tournament Rotation | 9 ft or 10 ft | +20% buffer | 45–90 min |
Choosing the right size of the room for a Pool Table commonly confuses many folks. Only part of the reason is the table itself. Very important is the area around it maybe even more than the table.
If you lack enough free space, the game becomes tight and confined.
Sizes of average Pool Tables normally range between 7 and 9 feet in length. The 7-foot table works for bar rooms and one uses it also in events like the National Championships of BCAPL in Las Vegas. The 8-foot table is typical for homes.
The 9-foot version is the full-size American model, that impresses with its beauty. However Pool Tables do not limit to those three types. There are also 6-foot, 10-foot even 12-foot tables.
One can order a table custom made in any size.
The rule of thumb advises to add around 5 feet to every side of the table. The Pool Table stick is less than 5 feet, so you need space for shots from the edge without touching the wall. The average stick measures 58 inches.
For an 8-foot table, that is around 4 feet and 8 feet long, a room of 14 feet by 18 feet works well. Ideal space for a 9-foot table with standard sticks is about 18 feet 4 inches by 14 feet 6 inches. The tiniest tabel, 3.5 by 7 feet, requires at least a room of around 15 feet by 17 feet.
A 7-foot table suits well for small or medium rooms, for beginners or newcomers. In clubs and pools 7-foot and 9-foot tables are the most liked, while 8-foot ones usually stand in homes. So an 8-foot table can serve as a good compromise between both.
The layout of the room, already standing furniture and height of ceiling all affect, which table one chooses best. For a 7-foot Diamond table you need an area of around 17 feet by 13.5 feet, but that is four dedicated use. In that space no more resting chairs or drink table fit.
In more angled rooms it helps to use short sticks. 48-inch sticks shrink the needed free area. Combined with a 7-foot table, a 48-inch stick makes the game possible in a smaller room for household fun.
Even so short sticks do take from the enjoyment. Playing in a tight area is not fun. At least 5 feet of free space around the playing surface is the intended minimum.
Before you buy, carefully measure the room, because that is the wisest step. The size of the area is veryimportant, especially during building or choice of a wanted game room.