Conference & Boardroom
How Long Should a Conference Table Be for 8, 10, 12, or 16 People?
A conference table needs about 24 inches of edge per seated person at a minimum, or 30 inches for comfort...
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How big should a conference room be? Exact dimensions, per-person clearances, and table and seating recommendations for small, medium, large, and boardroom spaces.
Conference rooms are sized to the meeting. Small rooms (120–168 sq ft) seat 4 to 6; medium (252–320 sq ft) seat 8 to 10; large (432–572 sq ft) seat 12 to 16; boardrooms (720+ sq ft) seat 18 or more. Plan roughly 20 to 25 square feet per person, a 36-inch door, and at least 36 inches of clearance behind seated chairs.
Conference room size shapes everything about how a meeting runs — sightlines, acoustics, who speaks up, how fast decisions move. Get the dimensions wrong and a room feels either cramped and contentious or empty and impersonal. Get them right and the space disappears so the people in it can think. This guide gives precise dimensions, per-person clearances, and seating for four room sizes — small, medium, large, and boardroom — plus the right table and chairs for each.
A common industry planning convention allows 20 to 25 square feet per person for a standard conference room and 25 to 30 for an executive boardroom. Doorways should be at least 36 inches wide (ADA), and circulation behind seated chairs needs at least 36 inches — preferably 48 — so people can stand and pass without disrupting the room.
Conference room sizes at a glance
| Room category | Dimensions | Total area | Capacity | Table length | Best uses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small | 10×12 to 12×14 | 120–168 sq ft | 4–6 people | 5–7 ft | Interviews, 1-on-1s, focused huddles |
| Medium | 14×18 to 16×20 | 252–320 sq ft | 8–10 people | 8–10 ft | Team meetings, client pitches, training |
| Large | 18×24 to 22×26 | 432–572 sq ft | 12–16 people | 12–16 ft | Department reviews, all-hands, workshops |
| Boardroom | 24×30 to 30×40+ | 720–1,200+ sq ft | 18–28+ people | 18–26+ ft | Board meetings, executive sessions |
No building code sets a comfort minimum for conference rooms. The one authoritative figure is the IBC occupant-load factor — 15 net square feet per person for a tables-and-chairs space — but that is a life-safety maximum density, not a comfort target. The familiar 20 to 25 square feet per person is industry planning convention.
IBC 2021 — Table 1004.5, occupant load
Small conference rooms are for high-context conversations — interviews, status check-ins, decisions among four to six people who already know each other. The room should feel close enough for natural conversation but not so tight that anyone feels trapped.
Mid-back ergonomic task chairs with a five-wheel base, mesh or upholstered seat, and adjustable arms. Skip the high-back executive look here — it overwhelms the room and signals more formality than the conversation needs. Keep the footprint compact so people can rotate without colliding.
Shop the right size: tables seating up to 6 · 5–6 ft tables
The medium conference room is the workhorse of most offices — sized for the recurring team meeting, the prospect pitch, the cross-functional review. Enough room to set up a presentation without feeling like a stage, intimate enough that no one in the back checks out.
Mid-back executive or premium task chairs with adjustable lumbar, height, and arms. Meetings this size routinely run 45 to 90 minutes, so chairs need to hold up for the whole runway. Match the chair finish to the table tone rather than mixing materials.
Shop the right size: tables seating up to 8 · up to 10 · 8–9 ft tables
Large rooms host department-wide meetings, training, and workshops. Sightlines and acoustics start to matter more than intimacy — anyone at the far end has to hear, see, and be seen clearly. Plan for both primary table seating and overflow along the walls.
Mid- to high-back executive chairs with arms at the primary table, plus a row of side chairs along one wall for overflow. The primary chairs should match across all seats — visual consistency reads as professionalism at this scale. Choose casters, not glides, so people can reposition without lifting.
Shop the right size: tables seating up to 14 · up to 16 · 14–15 ft tables
The boardroom is the room everything else gets compared to. Material quality, finish, and proportion all carry weight — clients, investors, and partners read the room before the first slide loads. Spend the budget here on table presence and chair quality; the technology should be excellent but invisible.
High-back executive chairs in premium leather or structured upholstery, identical across all primary seats. The head-of-table seat can be distinguished by scale — a slightly taller back, a larger frame — but should match the material and finish: distinction without inconsistency. Plan one or two side chairs against a credenza wall for advisors and observers.
Shop the right size: tables seating up to 18 · luxury conference tables
Conference room clearances
| Clearance type | Minimum | Recommended | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Behind seated chair to wall | 36 in | 48 in | Pushback and standing room |
| Behind seated chair, ADA | 60 in | 60 in+ | Wheelchair turning radius |
| Per person at table edge | 24 in | 30–36 in | Materials and elbow room |
| Primary circulation aisle | 36 in | 44 in | Walk-through during meetings |
| Door width | 36 in | 36 in | ADA compliance |
| Table end to display wall | 4 ft | 5–8 ft | Readability for front-row seats |
The right conference room is sized to its actual job. A small room with the wrong dimensions feels uncomfortable; a large room overspecified for the meetings it hosts feels empty and unfocused. Lead with the meetings you actually run, then size the room — table, chairs, displays, and clearances — around them. When you are ready to specify the table, the conference tables collection filters by exact length, capacity, finish, and built-in features — or any table can be built to your room’s exact dimensions.