Dresser dimensions show the width, depth, height, and sometimes drawer size of a storage piece. Reading these measurements before ordering helps shoppers understand wall fit, drawer clearance, walking space, scale, delivery expectations, and whether the dresser will work in a bedroom, closet, hallway, or apartment.
Width tells you which wall can handle it
Width is the side-to-side measurement. It decides whether the dresser can sit on the wall you have in mind without blocking a door, closet, outlet, vent, or walkway.
Measure the wall first, then subtract space for anything that opens or needs access. A dresser should not use every inch available. Rooms need breathing room, even when the storage situation feels urgent.
Match width to the storage job
A narrow dresser works well for tight walls and small rooms. A wide dresser works better when you need more drawer categories or shared storage.
Naima 5-drawer is about 23 inches wide, which suits narrow spaces. Naima 10-drawer is about 40 inches wide, which suits longer walls and larger storage needs.
Depth decides how the room moves
Depth is the front-to-back measurement. This number affects walking space more than many shoppers expect. A dresser can fit against the wall and still make the room feel cramped if the depth is too much.
Depth also affects drawer clearance. You need space for the dresser itself, the open drawer, and your body while using it. The bed, closet, and doors all need to be considered.
Shallow depth can help small rooms
Tinge dressers are about 14 inches deep. That slimmer depth can be useful in small bedrooms, closets, dorm rooms, apartments, and hallways where bulky furniture would crowd the path.
Shallow storage works best for clothing, linens, accessories, and soft household items. It may not suit very bulky items that need deep drawers.
Height changes reach and visual weight
Height is the floor-to-top measurement. A tall dresser uses vertical space and keeps the footprint smaller. A lower dresser gives more top-surface function and can sit more comfortably under windows.
Check who will use the dresser. Top drawers should be reachable, especially in kids’ rooms or shared spaces. If the highest drawer is awkward, reserve it for lighter or less frequent items.
Look for drawer information too
Product pages may list overall dimensions without giving every drawer measurement. Overall dimensions still help, but drawer capacity and use matter too.
Tinge drawers hold 20 lbs each, which is a useful guide when planning clothes, linens, accessories, and seasonal storage. Weight limits tell you more about daily use than dimensions alone.
Use tape before ordering
Mark the dresser dimensions on the floor with painter’s tape. Add the open-drawer space. Then walk around the room as if the dresser is already there.
This small test can prevent a very large cardboard box from teaching you a lesson.